Forbes

REGAINING ALTITUDE

After blowing billions developing a new jet to compete with airbus and boeing, bombardier almost crashed and burned. now an outsider has taken charge and pulled the Canadian company out of its tailspin—but can he get back up to cruising speed?

- BY JEREMY BOGAISKY

After blowing billions developing a new jet, Bombardier almost crashed and burned. Now an outsider has pulled the Canadian company out of its tailspin—but can he get back up to cruising speed?

Late on a Thursday in January 2015, Alain Bellemare was sitting in his office at United Technologi­es in Hartford, plotting his next move. Then 53 years old, he had been passed over for CEO, and the company had just announced that afternoon he was quitting his job as head of the conglomera­te’s aerospace division when he got a call from his fellow Montreal native and longtime friend Pierre Beaudoin, the CEO of Bombardier.

Beaudoin said he was facing a crisis. His father, Laurent, had transforme­d the Canadian company from a regional snowmobile maker into a rail giant and, more recently, an aerospace terrier nipping at the heels of Boeing and Airbus, making their family a multibilli­on fortune in the process. But Pierre had reached too far with the CSeries aircraft, the first plane Bombardier was developing entirely in-house, aimed at a market niche somewhere between a re-

gional jet and a Boeing 737. Bombardier was getting set to disappoint investors with a $1.6 billion quarterly loss. Perhaps Bellemare could help?

Bellemare said no, but on a Friday a few weeks later he flew to Montreal to meet Beaudoin for what he thought would be a quick visit. With the earnings report looming, Beaudoin pressed Bellemare to become Bombardier’s CEO, asking him to stick around to meet the board. By Monday, “I needed to find someplace to clean my shirt,” Bellemare says with a chuckle. His wife sent clothes from their home in Connecticu­t. He literally wouldn’t return to his house for another two years, when the elder of his two sons graduated high school.

In a blitz of salesmansh­ip in his first ten months, Bellemare found the cash to keep the company going by selling new shares, bonds and assets, raising a total of $5.6 billion, including $1 billion in bail-

out funds from the Quebec government (Bombardier is one of the province’s largest high-wage employers). He ended the CSeries’ financial drain by simply giving away a majority stake in the program to Airbus, the competitor that had done the most to smother it. Over the past three years, Bellemare has set Bombardier on the path to one of the most remarkable industrial turnaround­s in recent years. And he’s done it without bowing to heavy pressure to end the dualstock structure that allows the Bombardier-Beaudoin family to control the company with just a 12.3% stake.

Having stabilized Bombardier, Bellemare faces the hard task of reigniting growth. Revenues fell from $20 billion in 2014 to $16.2 billion in 2017, but the company is no longer hemorrhagi­ng: After ten straight quarterly losses, it turned a slim profit in the last two. “Bellemare is doing amazing things,” says Richard Aboulafia, a Teal Group analyst. “They stopped the bleeding. Now they have to restore circulatio­n.”

Joseph-ArmAnd BomBArdier was a FrenchCana­dian mechanic who had been tinkering for almost a decade in his small shop in rural Quebec, trying to build a snowmobile, when, in 1934, his resolve was stiffened by tragedy: Unable to get to the hospital in a snowstorm, his 2-year-old son died from appendicit­is. By 1942, Bombardier had incorporat­ed his “snow car” company, which made large, multipasse­nger vehicles that served as ambulances, school buses and mail vans.

But it was Bombardier’s son-in-law, Laurent Beaudoin, an accountant from small-town Quebec, who built the company into a Canadian icon and the family into the closest thing Quebec had to royalty. His M.O.: acquiring struggling companies and securing generous government subsidies.

Laurent took over the company in 1966 at age 27 following Bombardier’s death. After the snowmobile business cratered during the 1973 oil crisis, he jumped into rail equipment, winning a bid to build trains for the Metro in Montreal, followed in 1982 by a $660 million contract ($1.8 billion today) for New York subway cars—almost double the company’s annual revenue at the time. A series of European acquisitio­ns took Bombardier to the forefront of the railequipm­ent market by the early 2000s.

Next: aerospace. Laurent purchased Canadair from the Canadian government in 1986 for $120 million after Ottawa wrote off more than $2 billion in developmen­t costs for its Challenger business jet. Combined with Learjet, which had been acquired in 1990 from its bankrupt parent, Bombardier rode a business-jet boom in the late ’90s, passing Gulfstream to top the sales charts.

Bombardier stretched the Challenger into the 50seat CRJ, the world’s first regional jet. It was a winner: With jet fuel cheap in the ’90s, U.S. airlines snapped up hundreds of CRJs to replace propeller-driven planes on short-haul routes to smaller cities.

Then came the big gamble: Bombardier’s first entirely new plane, the CSeries. The idea was born of confidence in the early 2000s after its twin aerospace successes and from the fear that the regional jet market was in decline, as oil prices climbed and airline consolidat­ion shrank route networks. Pierre, Laurent’s son and heir apparent, believed there was a hole in the market for a fuel-efficient plane sized somewhere between regional jets and Airbus’ and Boeing’s smallest planes, the A320 and the 737. In 2008, after Pierre became CEO, the board gave him the green light.

But Beaudoin underestim­ated the ferocity with which Airbus and Boeing would respond. The giants moved to erode the CSeries’ efficiency advantage, developing versions of the A320 and the 737 with new engines. When airlines considered buying the CSeries, Airbus and Boeing countered with cut-rate offers on larger aircraft. Beaudoin wouldn’t discount, believing the CSeries should command a premium.

Amid slow sales and technical snafus, the launch date slipped from 2013 to 2015. Developmen­t costs soared from an initial estimate of $3.4 billion to $6 billion. Meanwhile, Bombardier’s business-jet division was burning billions in designing two other new planes: the Learjet 85 and the Global 7000. The train division had fallen badly behind on railcar projects in New York, Toronto and Switzerlan­d.

With cash running short and investor discontent rising, Bombardier needed to tap the capital markets. Beaudoin wasn’t the man to make it rain. Exit Beaudoin; enter Bellemare.

BellemAre hAd A reputation as a savvy, deeply networked operator after his 18 years at United Technologi­es. Gravelly-voiced and high-energy, he can alternatel­y charm and crack the whip. Going in, he hadn’t appreciate­d how deep the problems were in all the company’s divisions, besides the CSeries. “There was basically pressure everywhere,” he says, claiming that he slept only three hours a day for his first nine months on the job.

On his first day, Bellemare hit the road to raise money. By the end of 2015 he had raised that $5.6 billion—enough, he thought, to get the company through the next year, maybe two. Investors

Beaudoin underestim­ated the ferocity with which Airbus and Boeing would respond.

thought otherwise: The share price sank 70%, from 2.69 Canadian dollars the day before his appointmen­t to 77 cents in February 2016.

A big chunk of the cash came from the sale of a 30% stake in the rail unit, Bombardier Transporta­tion, which accounts for almost half of Bombardier’s revenue, to the Quebec pension fund for $1.5 billion (the fund wrangled a sweet guaranteed annual return of at least 9.5% from the cash-starved company).

In parallel to the fundraisin­g, Bellemare tightened operations and slashed costs. Rail was a prime target: It was a collection of unintegrat­ed businesses cobbled together through acquisitio­ns around the world. With the new rail chief, Laurent Troger, Bellemare quickly fired 7,700 people, slashed the number of suppliers from 10,000 to 4,500 and ended production of duplicate products in different countries. Sensing that the business-jet market was softening, he cut production from about 200 planes in 2015 to 138 in 2017. The Learjet 85 was canceled at a loss of $2.6 billion and the Global 7000 was delayed until late 2018.

The biggest headache remained the CSeries: It had finally entered service in 2016 but simply wasn’t selling. Bellemare moved to end the nightmare. After the Canadian government discourage­d a deal with a state-owned Chinese company, Bellemare went with Airbus, which agreed in October 2017 to take a 50.01% stake in the program in return for covering the majority of ongoing costs. No money changed hands. (The province of Quebec retains 16%, Bombardier the remaining 34%.)

The deal finally stanched the cash drain. “We’re starting to think about what’s next,” Bellemare says. “How can we start deploying capital in a discipline­d, strategic way.”

The pATh ForWArd for Bombardier remains narrow, with Bellemare facing a long-term debtload of $9 billion. The top priority: improve cash flow to start reducing that debt. Given the rich terms of the Quebec pension fund’s investment in the rail unit, buying the stake back is also high on his target list.

Bombardier has roughly $800 million a year budgeted to invest in R&D through 2020, well short of what’s needed to develop a large new aircraft.

But Bellemare has shown he can make good use of limited funds. Amid the company’s worst struggles, he green-lit a program to prepare for a future after the CSeries. In May, Bombardier surprised the industry by unveiling new models of two of its highly profitable large executive jets, the Global 5500 and 6500, with new Rolls-Royce Pearl engines. The company had kept them completely secret—a rare feat in a world where plane spotters lurk at every airport.

The two planes will come to market next year after Bombardier’s new flagship business jet, the long-delayed Global 7000—renamed the 7500—a $73 million, 19-passenger plane with an industry-leading range of 7,700 miles. The timing is good, with the business-aviation market showing life for the first time since the Great Recession. Through 2020, Bombardier expects overall sales to rise 25% to $20 billion, with the business-jet division accounting for three quarters of the growth.

Every other part of the company is the subject of M&A rumors. Some parts, like its regional jets and turboprops, are likely to have trouble attracting buyers. The Northern Ireland division, where Bombardier makes the innovative composite wing for the CSeries (now rebranded as the Airbus A220), could attract more interest.

An obvious buyer: Airbus itself. With the companies’ partnershi­p, “de facto we are going to become a major supplier to Airbus, but the opportunit­ies to keep growing even further are significan­t,” Bellemare says. “From the cockpit to wings to fuselage, we have capabiliti­es Airbus can benefit from.”

One thing is certain: Bombardier no longer looks headed for an emergency landing. “We don’t run away from issues and problems,” Bellemare says. “We run towards them.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Bombardier Ceo alain Bellemare stands beside a global 6000 business jet at a manufactur­ing plant outside montreal. The company is counting on a trio of new large business jets to boost profits, including a longer-range variant of the 6000.
Bombardier Ceo alain Bellemare stands beside a global 6000 business jet at a manufactur­ing plant outside montreal. The company is counting on a trio of new large business jets to boost profits, including a longer-range variant of the 6000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States