SFGate: Airbus Loses Order Lead to Boeing

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Wednesday, January 17, 2007 (AP)
Airbus Loses Order Lead to Boeing
By LAURENCE FROST, AP Business Writer


   (01-17) 05:16 PST PARIS, France (AP) --

   Airbus said Wednesday it won orders for 824 airliners in 2006, falling
behind Boeing Co., which won 1,050, for the first time since 2000.

   The European aircraft maker delivered 434 planes during the year —
36 more than its U.S.-based rival — to remain the No. 1 commercial
jet maker for the fourth straight year.

   Airbus' parent company European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co. also said
Wednesday that the plane maker will post a loss before interest and taxes
in 2006 due to charges related to its delayed A380 program and
restructuring.

   "2006 was clearly a turning point for us," said Louis Gallois, chief
executive of Airbus and co-CEO of EADS. "2007 will be the year for Airbus
to face reality and for it to implement all the measures necessary" to
deliver on promised restructuring targets.

   "What we want above all is to restore confidence with our customers and
our suppliers by delivering on promises," he said.

   Gallois also said Airbus forecasts 440-450 plane deliveries this year.

   Investors sent EADS shares down 3.5 percent to 24.83 euros ($32.14) in
Paris trading, apparently focusing more on the company's financial
outlook.

   In a statement ahead of Airbus' annual news conference, EADS said it was
still working on the 2006 financial accounts, but that Airbus was very
likely to produce a negative EBIT before goodwill.

   "Certain one-time charges in relation to settlements with customers,
impairment of assets, or financial impacts of Power8 originally expected
to occur in 2007 and after are now foreseen to be recognized as early as
2006," EADS said. "Furthermore, additional A380 charges not originally
envisaged could apply as well."

   Power8 is the company's ongoing, wide-ranging restructuring and
cost-cutting program. Many details of the program are still to be
announced.

   The A380 superjumbo's two-year delay has led to order cancelations and a
4.8 billion euros ($6.2 billion) profit warning. Airbus has yet to agree
on compensation with airlines including Dubai-based Emirates, the biggest
A380 customer with 43 planes on order, which has said it stands to lose
hundreds of millions of revenue dollars because of the setback.

   After setting an industry record with 1,111 orders in 2005, the figures
Airbus announced Wednesday showed that it has lost its five-year
leadership by that measure. In terms of deliveries, however, Airbus
remains the market leader for a fourth straight year.

   The deliveries performance, which always lags behind orders, is of little
consolation to Airbus as it seeks to claw back sales in the lucrative
market for mid-sized airliners, currently dominated by its U.S. rival.

   Airbus is being punished for its delay in developing a credible
alternative to Boeing's fuel-efficient 787, due to begin commercial
flights next year.

   The tardiness of the Airbus response — parent company EADS launched
the A350 XWB program last month for 2013 entry into service — is
just one consequence of problems with its double-decker A380, a flagship
European industrial project that industry watchers say is unlikely to turn
a profit for the better part of a decade, if at all.

   Beyond Wednesday's order and delivery figures, investors are keenly
awaiting details of the promised "Power8" restructuring program.

   "Implementing Power8 is very important in the current weak-dollar
environment," said Pierre-Antony Vastra, an analyst with Ixis Securities.
The Paris-based brokerage expects Airbus to announce about 430 deliveries
for 2006.

   The dollar's weakness against the euro has hurt profitability at Airbus
— which pays most of its costs in euros but bills customers in
dollars — and its exposure is set to worsen as currency hedges
expire in coming years.

   Louis Gallois, the co-CEO of European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co. w=
ho
also took over from departing Airbus chief Christian Streiff in October,
has vowed to press ahead with his predecessor's "Power8" turnaround plan. -=
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Copyright 2007 AP

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