Los Angeles Times

Airbus beats Boeing, even with lagging sales of its biggest jets

A large year-end order pushed Airbus’ number of planes sold over 1,000, but just 48 were wide-bodies.

- By Benjamin Katz Katz writes for Bloomberg.

Airbus completed 2017 doing what it does best: selling its bread-and-butter narrow-body aircraft.

The European manufactur­er on Dec. 28 firmed up its biggest-ever order from Indigo Partners for 430 A320 aircraft while also unveiling a new deal for 50 reengined versions of the same jet. All told, the flurry of activity during the last two weeks has totaled 705 single-aisle plane orders with a sticker price of $81.5 billion, pushing its full-year tally ahead of the figure at rival Boeing Co.

The A320’s success, coming in the final days of retiring sales chief John Leahy’s two-decade tenure, provides some respite for Airbus after a tumultuous few weeks after the planemaker unveiled a top management shakeup.

The orders for smaller jets also expose the flank that’s opened up at the other end of the manufactur­er’s product lineup: wide-body and ultra-large jumbo jets that are becoming increasing­ly hard to sell.

The final burst of deals pushed Airbus’s net new orders for the year to slightly more than 1,000 planes, including 48 wide-bodies. The company expected the total to lag behind the 700 or so aircraft it planned to deliver in 2017.

At Boeing, net orders for single- and twin-aisle models amounted to 844 planes as of Dec. 19, and the U.S. company hasn’t announced any sales contracts since.

As if to hammer home the weakness of wide-body demand, Airbus also confirmed that an event scheduled for last week to mark the delivery to Qatar Airways of its first A350-1000 twin-aisle plane will be delayed until early this year as the aircraft undergoes final preparatio­ns.

The move is the latest in a series of setbacks for the biggest A350 version, after United Airlines and Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. switched to the smaller -900 model, and adds a blemish to Airbus’s push to bring that jet to market.

Airbus shares gained 27% in 2017 to value the manufactur­er at 64.3 billion euros ($77.7 billion). Boeing’s shares surged 85% in 2017 to a market value of $175.6 billion.

The delay is also further evidence of Qatar Airway’s fickleness as a customer after past postponeme­nts and outright refusals by the airline to take deliveries of both narrow and wide-body jets, including a move last year to scrap orders for four A350s. The carrier’s order backlog has come into focus amid the Saudi Arabia-led isolation of its home country that has forced the airline to scrap and divert routes.

At the same time, a much-needed follow-on order for Airbus A380s from Emirates, the biggest customer for that aircraft, remains elusive, despite signals by the manufactur­er just a few weeks ago that a deal could materializ­e before year-end. Airbus, which was widely expected to sign the A380 contract at the Dubai Air Show in November, needs the order to bulk up its backlog for the double-decker aircraft and keep the loss-making program alive.

Gaining clarity on the future of the A380 will be a priority for outgoing Airbus Chief Executive Tom Enders, who revealed plans in December to step down in 2019.

Fabrice Bregier, the Toulouse, France, company’s chief operating officer and president of its commercial aircraft division, is also on his way out, having announced he plans to leave Airbus next month.

Expressing disappoint­ment that a deal with Emirates failed to materializ­e at the Dubai event, Bregier said in November he was confident Airbus could secure an order before the end of 2017. The executive has since said that should an order come, Airbus would be willing to commit to keeping the program going for another decade. Emirates President Tim Clark has said talks derailed in part because of the airline’s concerns about the future of the model.

Although Boeing has had similar difficulti­es winning orders for its biggest widebody jets, the Chicago company has managed to sell the smallest version, the 787, and has committed to accelerati­ng production rates for the aircraft.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States