SFGate: Boeing Orders Top 1,400 in 2007

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Friday, January 4, 2008 (AP)
Boeing Orders Top 1,400 in 2007
By ELIZABETH M. GILLESPIE, AP Business Writer


   (01-04) 04:10 PST SEATTLE, (AP) --

   Boeing Co. blew past an order record it set two years ago, selling 1,413
commercial jets in 2007 while delivering 441 planes, its best showing in
six years.

   The single-aisle 737 remains its best-seller, followed by the new midsiz=
e,
long-haul 787 Dreamliner, which is scheduled to begin flight testing by
spring.

   Analysts expect rival Airbus SAS to come out ahead on both orders and
deliveries.

   The Toulouse, France-based company had delivered 410 planes and logged
1,204 orders as of the end of November, the latest update available.
However, that order total does not factor in cancellations or conversions;
Boeing's does.

   Airbus, which set an industry record three years ago with 1,111 orders, =
is
scheduled to release its 2007 order and delivery totals in two weeks.

   Chicago-based Boeing, which assembles its commercial jets in the Seattle
area, won 1,044 orders in 2006, handily beating Airbus — which
pulled in 790 orders — for the first time in six years. Those
figures are adjusted for cancellations and conversions.

   Boeing had predicted it would deliver 440 to 445 planes in 2007, up from
398 the year before and the most since 2001, when it delivered 527 planes.
Airbus has projected it would deliver 450 to 460 planes last year,
compared with 434 in 2006.

   Together, Boeing and Airbus will set an industry record for orders in
2007.

   Sales are expected to slow down next year, partly because analysts say
orders have been rolling in at an unsustainable pace.

   Peter Arment, an analyst with American Technology Research Inc., said in=
 a
research note he expects orders to drop in half this year, echoing
predictions other analysts have made recently.

   Some industry watchers also worry that plunging consumer confidence and
other U.S. economic woes might spur a decrease in air travel.

   Most plane orders have been coming from carriers in Europe, Asia and the
Middle East, which are updating and expanding their fleets.

   U.S. airlines have largely remained on the sidelines, and while some have
old planes they badly need to replace, they may hold off until their
finances and the economy at large show stronger signs of recovery before
making any significant orders, analysts say.

   "The U.S. legacy carriers have yet to have sustained recovery," said Sco=
tt
Hamilton, managing director of the Seattle-area aerospace consultancy
Leeham Companies LLC. "We've seen some profitability, but I think it's
best described as tenuous."

   While deliveries don't grab as many headlines, analysts often argue that
orders don't mean much until a customer gets the keys.

   "The general joke is that if an airline makes money it orders planes, and
if it keeps making money it takes delivery of those planes," said Richard
Aboulafia, an analyst with the aerospace consulting firm Teal Group, Corp.

   Boeing shares gained 36 cents to close at $86.98 Thursday. -------------=
---------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2008 AP

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