SFGate: Co-Chief of EADS Rules Out Resigning

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Wednesday, June 28, 2006 (AP)
Co-Chief of EADS Rules Out Resigning
By LAURENCE FROST, Associated Press Writer


   (06-28) 04:07 PDT PARIS, France (AP) --

   The co-chief executive of Airbus parent company EADS ruled out resigning
as he gave testimony to French lawmakers Wednesday, legislators said,
despite management turmoil stemming from delays to the superjumbo A380 and
suspiciously timed stock sales.

   More than one deputy present during the closed-door hearings said Noel
Forgeard called it "out of the question" that he step down.

   Forgeard — whose job may be on the line in a pending shakeup &#821=
2;
is under mounting pressure over his sale of stock in European Aeronautics
Space and Defence Co. weeks before it announced delays in the A380 that
angered airlines and rattled the market.

   He was summoned by a parliamentary committee in the National Assembly,
France's lower house, looking into stock sales by Forgeard and five other
EADS managers. Forgeard insists that the March sale — in which he
made euro2.5 million (US$3.1 million) — was an "unfortunate
coincidence" and not the result of insider information.

   Lawmakers said after the meeting that Forgeard had given a confident
performance when responding to questions about management problems at EADS
and Airbus.

   Governing UMP party lawmaker Pierre Menieri said, however, that "the
doubts remain" regarding the share sales. Still, he said lawmakers were
most concerned about the future of EADS and its jobs.

   Fellow UMP lawmaker Patrick Ollier said the French market watchdog, known
by its French acronym AMF, should be allowed to complete its investigation
before conclusions are drawn.

   "It is for the AMF to decide, not for us," Ollier said.

   The AMF is investigating the timing of the share sales and seeking to
determine whether EADS informed investors as soon as it was aware of the
delays.

   Opposition Socialist deputy Henri Emanuelli said the party would press
ahead with demands for a full parliamentary inquiry into mismanagement at
EADS, but stopped short of leveling personal accusations against Forgeard.

   EADS shares plunged 26 percent on June 14, after the company announced t=
he
A380 delays and said the production hitches would shave euro2 billion
(US$2.5 billion) off profit over four years. EADS controls Airbus via an
80 percent stake.

   The announcement and revelations of the stock sales prompted calls for a
change in the leadership of European defense giant EADS, which is run
jointly by French-German management.

   French Finance Minister Thierry Breton said Tuesday that management
changes at EADS are "in the process of being finalized." He indicated that
France had dropped earlier demands to change the delicate Franco-German
balance of the company.

   EADS shares were down 2.6 percent at euro21.50 (US$27.02) in Paris
trading. ------------------------------------------------------------------=
----
Copyright 2006 AP

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