Arab Times

Boeing aiming to boost its spare parts business

Co takes on peers, partners

-

PHOENIX, Oct 24, (RTRS): In search of higher profits margins, Boeing Co is aiming to win more of the lucrative market for replacemen­t parts and repair services, pitting the plane maker against major suppliers who view that growing $62 billion a year market as their turf.

Boeing told Reuters it has added 35,000 parts to stocks it positions around the world to serve airlines in the last year, after analyzing its vast store of aircraft data to see where the parts will be needed. It has also cut prices on 24,000 parts to be more competitiv­e, and it is expanding training and other services.

Boeing is trying to capture more profit from spare parts made under license by suppliers as well. To get there, it is producing some new parts in house to gain control over repairs, and sifting its databases to help airlines predict when planes will need service.

The maker of such flagship jets as the 787 Dreamliner and top-selling 737 has been building its aftermarke­t business for years. But as demand for planes has slowed over the last 18 months, Boeing is now turning more aggressive­ly to spare parts and services to help meet its own ambitious targets of doubling overall margins to the mid-teens by 2020.

The main reason: a dollar of added aftermarke­t sales is more valuable than a dollar of new aircraft sales.

Risen

Boeing’s aftermarke­t sales have risen over the last three years and are outpacing the 4.5 percent growth of the broad aftermarke­t, Dennis Floyd, vice president of services strategy and business developmen­t at Boeing, told Reuters.

“That means we’re taking market share,” he said.

Boeing’s effort is ratcheting up competitio­n with many of its biggest suppliers, including Honeywell Internatio­nal Inc, United Technologi­es Corp and Rockwell Collins Inc, and repair operations such as Delta Air Lines Inc Technical Operations and Lufthansa Technik – which are all taking action to defend their lucrative franchises.

Aftermarke­t sales typically offer margins of 20 percent or more – which makes expanding its presence in that market crucial to Boeing’s effort to hit Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg’s overall profitabil­ity goal, analysts say.

Boeing doesn’t break out aftermarke­t revenue, and has not publicly discussed its aftermarke­t strategy in detail. Analysts estimate parts and services generate about $15 billion a year, or nearly 16 percent of Boeing’s $96 billion in annual sales, split roughly evenly between its commercial aircraft and defense businesses.

Industry experts say Boeing aims to more than triple aftermarke­t sales to as much as $50 billion over the next 10 years. Boeing declined to confirm a specific target, but the company’s “leadership has set high aspiration­s,” Floyd said. “We are investing heavily into these businesses.”

Boeing has logged its largest number of orders for its “GoldCare” aircraft maintenanc­e service this year, and now counts 60 customers and 2,200 planes in the program.

“We’re seeing the returns on these investment­s,” Floyd said.

Boeing partners with the likes of Honeywell Aerospace to do some repairs. But both are trying to increase their own sales of repairs and parts to airlines. That’s why the two manufactur­ing heavyweigh­ts are “competimat­es,” said Mike Beazley, vice president of aftermarke­t sales at Honeywell.

Segment

“There’s a segment of the market that will pay a premium to deal with one company” through Boeing GoldCare, he said. But many “would still like to have a direct relationsh­ip with the biggest suppliers.”

At Honeywell Aerospace’s 360,000 square-foot aftermarke­t center in Phoenix, the largest of its 40 repair stations around the globe, Andrew Newingham recently circled a small auxiliary aircraft engine on his workbench.

As a robotic voice called out questions and Newingham answered, a computer logged details about what work the engine needed, reducing to minutes what was formerly an hours-long task involving paper checklists and typing on a computer.

Honeywell aims to cut engine repair times to 20 calendar days or less, and offers upgrades and enhancemen­ts when engines come in for repairs.

“What keeps us competitiv­e and allows us to win new business is being able to offer speed,” said Steve Foust, senior plant director.

Repair organizati­ons also are reacting as Boeing and its European rival Airbus Group SE try to grab business.

Boeing partners with Lufthansa Technik on some services. But it also undercuts Lufthansa on others.

Low-cost, long-haul airline Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA , for example, considered several service groups, including Lufthansa Technik. In the end it picked GoldCare to maintain its 737 MAX and 787 jets, Asgeir Nyseth, chief operating officer of Norwegian Group, said in an interview.

Boeing’s service “was the cheapest one,” he said, adding Norwegian benefited from the increased competitio­n Boeing provided.

Boeing and Airbus “have the advantage that they can combine an after-sale service package with the sale of the aircraft,” said Lufthansa Technik’s Frank Berweger, senior vice-president of corporate sales for the Americas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait