Bangkok Post

Delta may delay 40 Airbus jet deliveries

- JULIE JOHNSSON MARY SCHLANGENS­TEIN SIDDHARTH PHILIP

Delta Air Lines is in talks with Airbus SE to delay at least 40 aircraft deliveries set for this year, as the carrier grapples with a travel market stricken by the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to people familiar with the matter.

“At the same time, Delta plans to bolster its cash stockpile by raising $750 million from a sale-leaseback deal for nine of the remaining Airbus jetliners scheduled to be handed over,’’ said the people, who asked not to be named because the discussion­s are private.

“The two transactio­ns aren’t linked, meaning one could get done without the other,’’ they said.

“The financing involves five Airbus A321 planes, two A350 aircraft and two A330neo jets,’’ the people said.

Both deals follow through on Delta chief executive Ed Bastian’s July pledge to tamp down capital expenditur­es on aircraft at least through the end of this year as the company works to stem losses from the collapse in demand for flights.

The belt-tightening measures by one of the world’s best-capitalise­d airlines underscore­s the pressure on Airbus and its US rival, Boeing Co. Both manufactur­ers have been working furiously to preserve orders at a time when airlines have little need for new aircraft and undelivere­d jetliners are stacking up outside their factories.

“We’re in intensive contact with customers, and Delta is no exception,” said Airbus spokesman Stefan Schaffrath. “Agreements remain confidenti­al.” Delta declined to comment. The Atlanta-based airline has vowed to reduce capital spending by $3.5 billion this year, in part by working with plane and engine manufactur­ers to “optimise the timing of our future aircraft deliveries,” according to a Delta filing in July.

A breakdown of the jets likely to be deferred wasn’t immediatel­y available. In a research note, analysts at Citigroup estimated about 14 plane deliveries for 2020 remained potentiall­y at risk, including A220 and A321 single-aisle models.

As of June 30, Delta held $14.2 billion in commitment­s for aircraft purchases, including $2.35 billion in the second half of this year. The filing didn’t provide the number of jets to be handed over during the last six months of 2020.

Almost all of Delta’s outstandin­g orders are for Airbus planes, and the scheduled deliveries for all years includes 100 of the A321neo, 27 of the A321, 64 A220s, 32 of the A330neo and 22 of the A350 jetliners. Most of the planes on order are due to be added to the carrier’s fleet through 2022.

US airlines are slashing spending and parking some jets as domestic passenger totals languish at about a third of last year’s levels. With the coronaviru­s pandemic also slamming demand for internatio­nal travel, carriers have fortified their cash stockpiles as well.

Delta borrowed $9 billion against its SkyMiles loyalty programme in a deal announced last week. The airline, which had close to $16 billion in cash at the end of June, “is burning through about $750 million a month,’’ chief financial officer Paul Jacobson said on Sept 17.

The squeeze on cash has thrown airlines into intense negotiatio­ns with Toulouse, France-based Airbus and Chicago-based Boeing over whether and when to take delivery on new jetliners that were ordered before the pandemic hit.

To date, Airbus has managed to largely avoid order cancellati­ons by postponing handovers or allowing customers to switch to jets that better suit their post-pandemic needs.

CEO Guillaume Faury said in July that almost no customers were taking deliveries as expected six months ago, and that the manufactur­er was turning to promissory notes or advance payments in some cases to ensure airlines remained committed.

Airbus’ own outlook is worsening, with Faury stepping up warnings this week that the company may have to make forced job cuts as it targets the eliminatio­n of 15,000 positions.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Delta Air Lines planes sit at gates on the opening day of the Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport in Utah on Sept 15.
BLOOMBERG Delta Air Lines planes sit at gates on the opening day of the Salt Lake City Internatio­nal Airport in Utah on Sept 15.

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