SFGate: EADS Swings to Loss on A380 Delays

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Wednesday, November 8, 2006 (AP)
EADS Swings to Loss on A380 Delays



   (11-08) 03:14 PST PARIS, France (AP) --

   Airbus parent EADS said Wednesday it swung to a third-quarter loss due to
problems at the European aircraft maker and warned that the freighter
version of its A380 superjumbo could suffer more order cancellations.

   The European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. said it lost 195 million
euros ($245 million) in the July-September quarter, after a net profit of
279 million euros in the year-earlier quarter. The company said costly
A380 production delays and a weak U.S. dollar weighed on the bottom line.

   Memphis, Tenn.-based delivery company FedEx Corp. said Tuesday it had
scrapped its order for 10 of the A380 freighters because of delays to the
program, now two years behind the original schedule. FedEx ordered 15
Boeing Co. 777s instead.

   EADS Chief Financial Officer Hans-Peter Ring said Airbus' 15 remaining
freighter orders — 10 from United Parcel Service Inc. and five from
International Lease Finance Corp. — still need to be "reconfirmed."

   All the freighter orders are now "in the cancellation zone," he said. UPS
said late Tuesday the Atlanta-based company was still reviewing its
options.

   Airbus still has 142 orders on its books for the plane's passenger
version. In the wake of the latest delays, Virgin Atlantic Airways
deferred delivery of its first A380s until 2013 and Emirates, the
program's biggest customer with 45 planes on order, announced it was
sending an audit team to France to check on the latest delivery schedule.
Australia's Qantas Airways Ltd. increased its A380 order to 20 planes from
12.

   EADS said Wednesday that earnings before interest and taxes, or EBIT
— a closely watched aerospace benchmark — swung to a loss of
239 million euros ($305 million) compared with a year-earlier profit of
559 million euros.

   Revenue for the quarter rose 14 percent to 8.49 billion euros ($10.83
billion), helped by strong sales of both military and civilian aircraft.

   Nine-month revenue for the Franco-German company came in at close to 27.5
billion euros ($35.08 billion), while EBIT and net profit both slipped
about a third to 1.4 billion euros ($1.79 billion) and 848 million euros
($1.08 billion).

   In the past few weeks, some analysts have raised concerns that the A380
delays could hamper development of the A350 — a new widebody jet
designed to compete with Boeing's fast-selling 787 and 777.

   A decision on whether to go ahead with the A350 will be taken in the next
few weeks, Ring reiterated Wednesday. Airbus will have to meet
cost-cutting targets if it is to "deliver on all programs at the same
time."

   Airbus announced plans Monday to slash the number of suppliers it uses to
500 from the current 3,000, as part of a promised drive to find annual
savings of 2 billion euros ($2.5 billion) by 2010. Thousands of job cuts
are also expected.

   Penalty payments to airlines that ordered a now-abandoned, less ambitious
version of the A350 could reach up to 800 million euros ($1 billion) in
the last quarter of the year, Ring said.

   Shares of European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. rose 1.6 percent to
20.99 euros ($26.77) in Paris. --------------------------------------------=
--------------------------
Copyright 2006 AP

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