SFGate: Forgeard, Humbert Quit EADS, Airbus Posts

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Sunday, July 2, 2006 (AP)
Forgeard, Humbert Quit EADS, Airbus Posts
By ANGELA DOLAND, Associated Press Writer


   (07-02) 10:50 PDT PARIS, France (AP) --

   Noel Forgeard, the co-chief executive of European defense group EADS,
stepped down Sunday as part of a management shake-up to win back
investors' confidence after its commercial plane unit Airbus announced
delays for the new A380 superjumbo jet.

   Airbus head Gustav Humbert also resigned and was succeeded by Christian
Streiff, a former executive with French building materials maker Compagnie
de Saint-Gobain SA, EADS said in a statement.

   Louis Gallois, head of France's SNCF rail operator and former chairman of
engine maker Snecma, steps in for Forgeard. He will work alongside current
EADS co-CEO Tom Enders.

   The defense group has been searching for ways to win back the confidence
of airlines and investors since shares plunged 26 percent June 14 on news
of A380 production delays of up to seven months. The European Aeronautic
Defence and Space Co. controls Airbus through an 80 percent stake, with
Britain's BAE Systems PLC holding the rest.

   The announcement — which will cut an estimated 2 billion euros ($2=
.5
billion) from profits over four years — prompted calls for a change
in the leadership of EADS, which is run jointly by French-German
management.

   EADS' two main shareholders, Lagardere SCA and DaimlerChrysler AG, which
hold a combined 37.5 percent stake in the group, have been trying to
resolve communication problems within the companies. EADS bosses were
unaware of the delays until it was too late to prevent a major crisis of
investor confidence. The shake-up will give EADS tighter control of
Airbus.

   Forgeard has also been under pressure for a sale of EADS stock that
brought him 2.5 million euros ($3.1 million) just weeks before management
ordered an internal study of the production hitches. He denies insider
dealing and says the timing was an unfortunate coincidence.

   France's Financial Markets Authority is still investigating Forgeard and
the five other directors who exercised stock options in March.

   In exchange for sacrificing Forgeard, French shareholders gained an
important post within EADS, where management positions are delicately
balanced between German and French executives. Humbert is German; his
replacement, Streiff, is French.

   Forgeard, who served as Airbus CEO from 1998 until last year, is credited
with making the company a serious rival to Chicago-based Boeing Co.
Airbus, based in Toulouse, France, has won more orders than Boeing every
year since 2001.

   But it was also under Forgeard's leadership that a first, six-month A380
production delay occurred, and an under-ambitious design for the A350
— billed as a rival to Boeing's 787 Dreamliner — was sent back
to the drawing board.

   Forgeard insisted last week that he would not step down and promised to
steer Airbus through its crisis. In a statement Sunday, he said his
resignation was voluntary. He also said that neither the stock sale nor
Airbus' operational problems were the reason for his departure and pointed
out that he had left the jet maker a year ago.

   "I did it solely for the company's interest, to end a situation that cou=
ld
have compromised the resolution of Airbus' current problems and EADS'
development," he said.

   Humbert, who worked his way up through Germany's aerospace industry, was
appointed Airbus chief executive in 2005 after working for the company for
several years. In a statement, he acknowledged that the A380 problems were
"a major disappointment for our customers."

   He added: "As president and CEO of Airbus, I must take my responsibility
for this setback."

   ___

   AP Business Writer Laurence Frost contributed to this report. ----------=
------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2006 AP

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