The Sun (Malaysia)

MAS may sign US$1.8b Boeing jets deal

> National carrier to buy eight 787s, announceme­nt to be made after Najib’s meeting with Trump

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SINGAPORE/KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia Airlines will announce a deal to buy eight widebody Boeing 787 jets during the visit of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Abdul Razak to the United States, two industry sources said yesterday.

The deal, worth more than US$1.8 billion (RM7.6 billion) at list prices, is expected to be one of the announceme­nts that will be made after Najib meets with US President Donald Trump yesterday, the sources said.

The United States was Malaysia’s third-largest trading partner in 2016. The meeting with Trump is critical for Najib, who is looking to raise his standing globally, and in Malaysia, where he is expected to call for a general election in the coming months.

An internatio­nal graft probe by the United States and several other nations into state fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) has hurt Najib’s popularity. With the US visit, Najib is hoping to put the 1MDB controvers­y behind him.

Najib is scheduled to witness a memorandum of understand­ing signing ceremony between Malaysia Airlines and Boeing, according to a schedule of the prime minister’s events in Washington.

The two sources said Malaysia Airlines considered buying Airbus A330neos before settling on the 787 order.

Aircraft manufactur­ers typically give discounts to list prices.

Malaysia Airlines said it would not comment on reports that are speculativ­e in nature. Boeing and Airbus declined to comment. The sources did not want to be named because the discussion­s were private.

Brendan Sobie, chief analyst at independen­t aviation research firm CAPA Centre for Aviation, said the timing of the order alongside Najib’s visit raised concerns of potential political influence over the purchase.

“This has happened before with Malaysia Airlines – and other airlines in this region for that matter – where the government has decided to buy an airplane that wasn’t really required,” Singapore-based Sobie said. “I think in this case the 787 is required anyway. But now that it is a political thing there are questions.”

Malaysia Airlines has been transformi­ng its operations under two consecutiv­e non-Malaysian bosses as it recovers from two tragedies in 2014, when flight MH370 disappeare­d in what remains a mystery and flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine.

The carrier is targeting a return to profit next year.

Malaysia Airlines CEO Peter Bellew said in June the carrier was in early negotiatio­ns with Airbus and Boeing for the purchase of 35-40 new long-range jets.

CAPA analyst Sobie said the airline needed widebodies for growth, as well as to replace ageing A330 aircraft over the next several years, making eight aircraft a smaller than expected order.

In the eight months ended Aug 31, Boeing announced 426 net orders compared to 215 at Airbus. – Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows Malaysia Airlines aircraft at the KL Internatio­nal Airport in Sepang.
File photo shows Malaysia Airlines aircraft at the KL Internatio­nal Airport in Sepang.

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