Times Colonist

Bombardier investing to overcome train backup

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MONTREAL — Bombardier Inc. shares plunged Thursday after it lowered its 2019 profit forecast and announced hundreds of millions in spending to push through a bottleneck at its train-making unit following earnings that came in below analysts’ expectatio­ns.

The news triggered a 16 per cent drop in the transporta­tion giant’s stock price to close at $1.91 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

The Montreal-based company plans to spend an additional $250 million to $300 million US this year to ramp up train production, raising investment in manufactur­ing and software engineerin­g at Bombardier Transporta­tion, its biggest division.

“We are going through a number of teething issues,” chief executive Alain Bellemare said on a conference call. “We are going through a bottleneck.

“The trains have been a little bit of a setback,” he said, noting that holdups are “mostly on the software side.”

Bombardier continues to struggle with a handful of contracts in Germany and the United Kingdom, part of the $33.6-billion US backlog at its rail unit, which saw adjusted core earnings fall 37 per cent year over year to $146 million US last quarter.

Analysts continued to question on-time project delivery. “This nine-inning transforma­tion now looks like it’s in extra innings,” said Credit Suisse analyst Robert Spingarn during the call.

The hitches in train production gave analysts pause as the company renews its focus on its rail and business jets, having cemented its departure from commercial aviation after three decades in the sector with a $550-million US deal to sell its flounderin­g regional jet program to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. in June.

“We believe that Bombardier’s cash flow will improve into 2020 as it makes progress on delivering on the challengin­g rail contracts and as Global 7500 [business jet] deliveries ramp up,” said National Bank of Canada analyst Cameron Doerksen, despite “the higher-risk programs currently being delivered.”

The company boosted its backlog of business jets by $400 million last quarter, aiming to deliver between 15 and 20 of the new $73-million jetliners this year.

Nonetheles­s, challenges in the train segment prompted the company to bump down its core adjusted earnings guidance for 2019 to between $1.2 billion and $1.3 billion, from $1.5 billion and $1.65 billion.

The announceme­nt came as the train-and-plane maker reported a $36-million net loss and a $47-million adjusted loss for the quarter ended June 30. The loss, reported in U.S. currency, amounted to four cents per diluted share before adjustment­s.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bombardier President and CEO Alain Bellemare
CANADIAN PRESS Bombardier President and CEO Alain Bellemare

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