The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Airbus legal risks spread to US, eclipsing Q3 profit

-

PARIS: Airbus said yesterday it had uncovered problems involving the use of sales agents to sell US arms technology, dragging the United States for the first time into a growing corruption scandal at Europe’s largest aerospace firm.

Airbus also warned of a material impact from potential fines resulting from existing bribery investigat­ions in the UK and France surroundin­g the use of middlemen in airplane sales, which have also triggered a sweeping internal investigat­ion.

But it said it was too early to gauge the size or timing of these or the outcome of the latest US-related findings.

Airbus said it had discovered inaccuraci­es in past declaratio­ns to the US State Department under part 130 of the US Internatio­nal Traffic in Arms Regulation­s (Itar), a section of US law covering the use of commission­s to sell arms.

Finance director Harald Wilhelm stressed the European company had not disclosed any secrets about sensitive US technology and that the issue was restricted to the use of sales agents and commission­s.

“This is about defence equipment and services related to it,” he said.

Airbus has been badly shaken by the existing corruption probes, which have already clipped aircraft sales.

Wilhelm declined to say whether the latest disclosure could lead to an investigat­ion by the US Department of Justice, which has so far stayed out of the European bribery probes.

The unexpected disclosure overshadow­ed third-quarter earnings which showed a sightly narrower-than-expected 4% decline on lower aircraft deliveries.

Airbus, the world’s second largest planemaker after Boeing, posted quarterly core operating earnings of 697 million euros (US$811mil) as revenue rose 2%. It took a further small charge for the troubled A400M military programme and warned of further changes later in the year.

Airbus reaffirmed its 2017 guidance but acknowledg­ed it would miss an informal goal of 720 jet deliveries that was higher than the official target of 700.

Markets had expected a weak quarter due to delays in commercial aircraft and a build-up of inventory.

Analysts on average expected third-quarter adjusted operating profit down 5.6% at 690 million euros on revenue up 1.8% at 14.2 billion, according to a Reuters survey. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia