SFGate: Airlines and Markets Pummel Airbus

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2006/06/14/financial/=
f104858D77.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, June 14, 2006 (AP)
Airlines and Markets Pummel Airbus
By ANGELA CHARLTON, Associated Press Writer


   (06-14) 10:48 PDT PARIS, France (AP) --

   Airlines around the world punished Airbus on Wednesday for delays in the
delivery of its A380 superjumbo, demanding compensation, reconsidering
orders — and in one case, striking a major deal with its rival
Boeing Co.

   Shares in Airbus' parent company crashed and Boeing's soared as
repercussions of the production problems with the world's biggest
passenger plane resonated throughout the industry.

   They also raised questions about the European planemaker's management and
strategy, and the future of the double-decker A380. Boeing is staking its
bets on a smaller, more fuel-efficient model.

   Singapore Airlines, one of the world's top carriers and the first to buy
the A380, said it was unhappy with the delays Airbus announced Tuesday. It
demanded compensation and, on Wednesday, worsened the blow by announcing
it would buy 20 Boeing 787-9 aircraft worth $4.52 billion and take options
on another 20 planes.

   Emirates Airlines, another sought-after buyer, said it was reconsidering
its order of 45 A380s. Australia's Qantas Airways said it was seeking
talks with Airbus over its orders for 12 A380s and wants some of its money
back. Malaysia Airlines said it was reviewing terms of its deal for six of
the planes.

   Airbus parent European Aeronautic Defense & Space Co. saw billions of
dollars wiped off its value Wednesday as shares plummeted by 26 percent to
close at 18.80 euros ($23.63), after it warned that operating profit would
be cut by about 500 million euros ($625 million) each year between 2007
and 2010.

   Shares in Boeing Co., meanwhile, rose 5 percent to $80.88 on the New York
Stock Exchange.

   The dismal day for Airbus reflected a sharp shift in the Toulouse,
France-based company's fortunes since the 555-passenger A380 took a
triumphant maiden flight last year over the Pyrenees. Airbus overtook
Boeing in order numbers in 2001 and in deliveries in 2003 and until
recently looked in robust shape.

   But the anger fueled by Tuesday's announcement of production bottlenecks
with the plane's electrical systems — the second major delay for the
$300 million A380 — suggests a less rosy future for the planemaker.

   "Boeing is eating Airbus' lunch, certainly this year. And they'll do it
again next year and for the foreseeable future, unless Airbus can pull a
rabbit out of a hat," said Jim Smith, aviation analyst and editor of
Jane's Transport Finance.

   It was the second Airbus project to falter in recent years, after the
A350, which it hoped would be the answer to Boeing's 787.

   The Singapore-Boeing deal stung especially deep because Airbus had hoped
Singapore Airlines would be one of the first and biggest customers for the
A350. But airline dissatisfaction with the A350 has forced Airbus to
redesign some of its parts and consider a costly overhaul, delaying its
launch for several years.

   Airbus insisted Wednesday that it was not the A380 itself but minor
production problems at fault for the delay.

   "There have been minor production issues which have accumulated into a
large number and require a complete, very detailed rethinking of the
installation process of wires and harnesses," said Thore Prang, spokesman
for the company in Hamburg. "It has nothing to do with the aircraft."

   The A380 delay "couldn't be a worse timing for Airbus," said aviation
analyst Richard Pinkham of the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation.
"Especially as it comes on the heels of the PR problems they had with the
A350."

   With the A380, Airbus was taking a risk, since only a few of the world's
airports have runways long enough and terminals that can be modified to
deal with its double deckers, analysts said.

   Airbus wagered that the airline industry would increasingly offer large
flights to international hubs. But Boeing bet that air travel would be
marked by the need for fuel efficiency and long-haul flights and is
focusing on the 330-passenger 787.

   "EADS made a strategic error by opting for a jumbo-sized jet rather than=
 a
fuel efficient model, especially if the price of oil increases further,"
said Matthieu Raimbault of French brokerage Viel Tradition.

   Singapore was the first carrier to buy the A380, ordering 10 with an
option to purchase another 15. Airbus said the first delivery to Singapore
was still expected by the end of this year.

   But deliveries will likely be limited to nine in 2007 instead of the 20 =
to
25 initially planned, Airbus said, with an additional shortfall of five to
nine A380 deliveries expected in 2008 and "around five" in 2009.

   Emirates Airlines said it was told to expect a six-month delay. "We are
considering our position and will be engaging with the manufacturer over
the next few weeks," the airline said in a statement.

   Airbus' chief commercial officer, John Leahy, confirmed that the company
will incur more late delivery penalties, but declined to provide a figure.
It could in theory also face order cancellations.

   EADS co-CEO Noel Forgeard, who in 2000 oversaw the launch of the A380 as
the head of Airbus, deflected suggestions that the setback could cost him
his job.

   "We have now to find the right ways forward," Forgeard said in a
conference call Wednesday.

   The troubles at Airbus damage the credibility of EADS management and may
bleed over into its defense business.

   Already they hit BAE Systems PLC, which owns 20 percent of Airbus but has
been seeking to sell its stake. BAE dismissed concerns that the Airbus
problems would hurt the price it could get for its stake, and its shares
came off earlier lows to end the day down 1.1 percent at 345 pence ($6.35)
on the London Stock Exchange.

   ___

   AP Business Writer Matt Moore in Frankfurt and Sui-Lee Wee in Singapore
contributed to this report. -----------------------------------------------=
-----------------------
Copyright 2006 AP

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]