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Category: Airbus news (Page 45 of 48)

United Continental’s Small-City Strategy Showing Cracks

Beginning in 2017, United Continental (NYSE: UAL) executed an abrupt strategy shift. After years of slow growth, the U.S. airline giant began expanding aggressively, with a particular focus on adding more routes to small and midsize cities.

However, United Airlines now plans to cut several small-city routes from its Chicago hub after Labor Day. This could mean nothing more than that these particular routes are underperforming compared to other small-city flights. Yet it is also possible that United is being forced to rethink its entire expansion strategy.

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United Continental’s Small-City Strategy

Boeing & Embraer Merger Talks In Final Stage

SAO PAULO (Reuters) – Embraer SA (EMBR3.SA) Chief Executive Officer Paulo Souza e Silva said the company is in the final stage of talks to combine operations with Boeing Co (BA.N), newspaper Valor Economico reported on its website late on Wednesday.

Souza e Silva, attending an event hosted by the paper, declined to elaborate on details of the agreement and described the negotiation as “complex.”

The two planemakers have been discussing for months a transaction in which a new company controlled by Boeing would be created and focused on commercial aviation. Embraer would keep its defence division and possibly its business jet unit.

A Brazilian air force official defended the deal between the two planemakers from the criticism of lawmakers at a congressional hearing on Wednesday, suggesting the government’s concerns about a deal have subsided.

Air Force Commander Lt Brig Nivaldo Luiz Rossato said the proposed deal would “preserve national sovereignty,” by keeping Brazilian defence programs out of the hands of the U.S. company, according to the congressional news service.

The companies said in April that they were discussing the creation of a new company with Embraer’s airliner business, leaving out its defence unit and “potentially” its business jet division.

Embraer said this week that talks were ongoing and any deal would need the approval of Brazil’s government and regulators.

Workers Party Congressman Carlos Zarattini called such a deal a “crime against the homeland,” questioning how the government, which can veto the deal, could let Boeing take control of the crown jewel of Brazil’s aerospace industry.

Rossato argued that the U.S.-Brazil partnership could actually preserve jobs at Embraer, which is wrapping up development on two major new families of aircraft and has not announced any other major investments.

Embraer shares rose nearly 4 percent in Sao Paulo on Wednesday amid rising speculation that a deal could be announced soon. The stock has gained about 35 percent so far this year.

(Reporting by Tatiana Bautzer; editing by Phil Berlowitz, G Crosse)

Stock Battle: American Airlines vs. JetBlue

Airline stocks have plunged this week for two major reasons. First, trade tensions with China caused investors to start worrying about demand. Second, oil prices have started moving higher again, following a brief respite prior to last week’s OPEC meeting.

Not surprisingly, the airlines with the lowest profit margins have been hit hardest. These carriers are the most vulnerable to fuel price increases and demand shocks, as small changes in their profit margins can severely impact their earnings. During the past year, American Airlines (NASDAQ: AAL) has fallen into the bottom echelon of U.S. airlines in terms of profitability, and so its share price tumbled 7.5% in the first three days of this week.

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American Airlines vs JetBlue

AirAsia X Still Has Not Confirmed Airbus A330neo Order

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – AirAsia X Bhd (AIRA.KL) needs to ensure the price, performance and engines of the Airbus SE (AIR.PA) A330neo are right before it will “finally confirm” its order for 66 of the jets, its co-group chief executive said on Tuesday.

AirAsia X, the long-haul arm of Malaysian low-cost carrier AirAsia Group Bhd (AIRA.KL), is the largest customer for the A330neo, which is struggling for sales relative to the rival Boeing Co (BA.N) 787.

AirAsia X has a firm order for the fuel-efficient A330neo widebody jets to replace its older first-generation A330s but it has been pushing back the delivery dates.

It has been talking to Boeing about buying the 787-10 jet as an alternative and is likely to make a decision later this year, a person familiar with the discussions previously told Reuters.

The airline’s CEO, Tony Fernandes, on Tuesday said on Twitter that he was visiting Airbus at its Toulouse headquarters to discuss the A330neo as well as the smaller A321neo.

“We have ordered the 330 but to finally confirm it we must make sure price is right. Performance is right. Engine is right,” he said. “And performance of the 330 251 ton is right. If right (it is) the plane we dreamt of and fought for and then we can order more. Or else.”

The 251 ton version, which could fly non-stop from Kuala Lumpur to London, is a heavier version of the jet and has more range but will not be available for delivery until 2020.

Fernandes added that he believed the A321neo, a large narrowbody jet, was a “great plane” and raised the prospect of ordering more. He is also the CEO of AirAsia, which has 100 A321neos on order.

(Reporting by Jamie FreedEditing by Christopher Cushing)

China Regional Jet Market Hits Regulatory Turbulence

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s regional jet market is struggling to get off the ground as Beijing slows approvals for new airlines, industry executives say, dashing hopes that recent policy changes would drive aircraft sales.

Foreign companies such as Bombardier Inc (BBDb.TO), Embraer SA (EMBR3.A) and ATR had cheered a 2016 policy that required passenger carriers to operate at least 25 city-hopper jets before graduating to bigger aircraft.

It appeared to all but assure sales of such small planes in the world’s fastest-growing aircraft market, currently dominated by wide-body jets, as the regulator tried to boost flights into China’s smaller cities.

But there is a problem, executives say: the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) has only approved two new airlines since the “Rule 96” policy went into effect.

“The truth is that almost two years has passed and I have not succeeded in one single deal,” said one executive from a Chinese aircraft lessor speaking on condition of anonymity, who added that he had met with numerous start-ups to promote regional aircraft.

The executives added that although the slowdown was probably well meaning, caused by regulators’ concerns over safety and quality, it meant that there was a queue of at least six Chinese airlines waiting for approval.

The policy had stoked optimism among regional aircraft makers, as Chinese airlines have for years mostly focussed on growing their fleets of Airbus (AIR.PA) and Boeing

Out of 3,311 commercial aircraft flying in China at the end of March, just 5 percent were regional jets, the CAAC said in April. By comparison, regional jets in 2016 took up 30.6 percent of the 7,039-strong fleet of aircraft in the United States, according to data from the Federal Aviation Administration.

“The intention is that (the regulators) want to push, but they have enhanced the entry barriers so they have very high standards for the investors,” said Wang Qi, chief China representative for French turboprop manufacturer ATR, which is renewing its Chinese certification.

Chinese airlines in general have a good safety record.

The CAAC did not respond to requests for comment.

PATIENCE AND FRUSTRATION

For many, Rule 96 underlined Beijing’s intentions to improve regional air transport. The country’s 13th five-year plan for 2016-2020 included 500 new airports.

But only Tianjiao Airlines in Inner Mongolia and Air China <601111.SS> <0753.HK> subsidiary Beijing Airlines, which converted from a private charter operator to a passenger airline, were approved last year.

An executive at Tianju Airlines, which is waiting for the green light to start carrier operations from central China’s Shaanxi province, said regulators grew more cautious.

But he said the airline hopes to fly next year, after four years of preparations and at least one change to its proposal to adjust to CAAC policies.

“We currently fulfil all conditions,” said the executive, who only gave his surname as Li because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

AirAsia Group (AIRA.KL), which is working with local partners to establish a low-cost carrier in China, has looked at options like buying an existing air operator’s certification to speed things up, according to two sources familiar with their plans.

The company, which last year signed a memorandum of understanding with China Everbright Group and the Henan government, declined to comment.

OPTIMISM

The only aircraft that meet Rule 96’s seat limits of 100 or less and are certified to be sold in China are Commercial Aircraft Corp of China Ltd’s [CMAFC.UL] ARJ-21, AVIC Aircraft’s <000768.SZ> MA60 turboprop and Bombardier’s Q400 and CRJ 900 models.

Bombardier and Embraer said they remained optimistic about their prospects in China.

“The situation under Rule 96 continues to evolve,” Bombardier Commercial Aircraft’s President Fred Cromer said in an interview with Reuters at the company’s Montreal-area factory in the Canadian province of Quebec last week.

“The fact that we have a plane that’s well known by the authorities there and an operator that operates quite a few works in our favour,” he said in reference to Bombardier CRJ 900 operator China Express.

Embraer said in an e-mail that it expects its E175 jet to obtain CAAC certification by September.

But Corrine Png, chief executive of transport consultancy Crucial Perspective, said Chinese airlines were still more inclined to buy larger jets to meet surging travel demand amid a shortage of landing slots and pilots.

“It would be costly to maintain a small number of regional jets in China which may not be economically efficient from the Chinese airlines standpoint,” she said.

HOMEGROWN COMPETITION

Industry insiders are also concerned that Beijing may be promoting China’s domestically produced aircraft over more advanced models.

COMAC put the ARJ-21 regional jet into service in 2016 and has delivered just five so far. But it has orders for 450 planes, dwarfing the numbers for Bombardier and Embraer’s in China.

Tianju Airlines told Reuters it had considered Airbus’ A320 and Embraer E190 jets but decided to buy the ARJ-21.

“We think it’s the most suitable model for us,” said Li, who declined to comment further.

ATR’s Wang said the turboprop maker planned to look beyond regional jets and consider general aviation, which Beijing has also pledged to support with infrastructure investment.

Any company can buy an aircraft and begin operating it for charters, for instance. That means ATR could reconfigure its 42-seat model into a 30-seat offering for such businesses, he said.

“That category has very low barriers and there are potential investors for ATR,” he said.

(By Brenda Goh, additional Reporting by Allison Lampert in MONTREAL, Jamie Freed in SINGAPORE, Brad Haynes in SAO PAOLO and the SHANGHAI Newsroom; Editing by Gerry Doyle)

Bamboo Airways To Buy 20 Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners

(Reuters) – Boeing Co (BA.N) said on Monday entered into an agreement to sell 20 of its widebody long-haul aircraft to Vietnamese startup Bamboo Airways in a $5.6 billion deal at current list prices.

As part of the deal, which is yet to be finalized, FLC Group-owned (FLC.HM) Bamboo Airways has made a deposit in mid-June to reserve the 787-9 Dreamliners, whose delivery is likely to begin from April 2020, through 2021, Boeing said.

Bamboo Airways plans to begin commercial operations next year out of Hanoi.

FLC Group has also signed an initial agreement with Airbus SE (AIR.PA) in March for up to 24 A321neo aircraft.

(Reporting by Arunima Banerjee in Bengaluru)

Jet Airways Buys 75 additional Boeing 737 Max Jets

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Jet Airways Ltd said on Monday it has agreed with Boeing Co to purchase 75 of its 737 MAX aircraft, as the Indian carrier expands to meet domestic passenger demand in the world’s fastest-growing aviation market.

Jet, India’s biggest full-service carrier, said in a regulatory filing it had entered an agreement to buy the aircraft, but it did not say whether the agreement was a formal order or a non-binding memorandum of understanding.

This is the third agreement Jet Airways has entered into for Boeing’s 737 MAX narrowbody jets over the last one year, taking the total to 225 aircraft. The Indian airline signed firm orders for 75 planes each in October and April.

Based on Boeing’s list prices, the latest deal could be worth as much as $9.7 billion depending on which 737 MAX the airline chooses. Airlines usually get significant discounts from manufacturers though, bringing costs well below list prices.

The 737 MAX can seat between 130 and 230 passengers, depending on the variant.

The latest agreement comes as Indian airlines rush to expand fleets to meet ever-increasing demand for domestic as well as international flights, making it one of the most targeted sales markets for Boeing and European rival Airbus SE.

Boeing said in July last year it expected Indian airlines to order up to 2,100 aircraft worth $290 billion over the next 20 years, calling it the highest-ever forecast for Asia’s third-largest economy.

Domestic passenger traffic in India has grown at more than 20 percent annually in the last few years despite a lack of infrastructure and air traffic congestion at some of its busiest airports such as Delhi and Mumbai.

(By Aditi Shah, additional reporting by Aby Jose Koilparambil in Bengaluru; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Louise Heavens)

Photo from: www.boeing.com

Delta To Buy 20 Bombardier Regional Jets

MONTREAL (Reuters) – As Bombardier (BBDb.TO) surrenders hopes of securing a top spot in commercial aviation with the sale of its money-losing CSeries jet program to Airbus (AIR.PA), the Canadian company is now drawing up plans to breathe new life into its older regional planes.

Bombardier is shoring up its loss-making regional jets and turboprops with a mixture of hard-sell, cost-cutting and outsourcing. It is also growing its line of business jets after a cash squeeze and production delays forced it to cede a majority stake in its high-tech CSeries which aims to break into the market for mainline jets dominated by Airbus and Boeing.

The company will now “sharpen the focus” on its remaining commercial planes, with Bombardier Commercial Aircraft President Fred Cromer recently expanding the leadership team for the division which has combined orders in hand for just for over 100 planes, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters.

Bombardier also plans to showcase its CRJ regional jets, which recently had a cabin upgrade with more overhead bin space to appeal to business travelers, at the industry’s flagship Farnborough Air Show in July, an event it previously used to market the CSeries, two sources familiar with the company’s thinking said.

The company’s regional jet initiative won a boost from Delta Air Lines (DAL.N), which on Wednesday announced orders for 20 CRJ 900s with the new interiors, valued at around $961 million by list prices, as it and other U.S. carriers replace aging 50 and 70-seat planes with new regional jets.

According to the memo and sources familiar with the situation, the company is now moving forward with a plan to lower its regional Q400 turboprop’s costs by outsourcing its wings and cockpit from Toronto to lower cost countries, although specific locations were not named.

In 2016, Bombardier expected to move the cockpit to China and the wings to Mexico with the union’s agreement, but Bombardier failed to carry it out because the program’s volumes were previously too low, both sources said.

Bombardier said in the memo it also aims to reap more profits by promoting aftermarket services for its over 2,000 regional planes already in the air, which is part of a broader strategy the company is using for its business jets.

In a sign that Bombardier will push harder on servicing existing planes, the company plans to hire a separate executive to head customer service for its regional planes, a position currently filled by the same person who heads the Q400 program, the second source said.

All of the sources spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss Bombardier’s private strategies.

HEADWINDS

For Bombardier, the challenge is to erase losses and generating $1.5 billion in revenues by 2020. But the turnaround strategy faces headwinds.

Bombardier’s efforts to revive regional plane sales, which it sees as a $240 billion market between 2017 and 2036, come as some forecasters are expecting limited near-term sector growth.

“Demand for regional aircraft will remain weak relative to large commercial aircraft,” said Moody’s in a recent note. It predicted that regional aircraft deliveries, including the CSeries, would grow by over 4 percent in 12-to-18 months, compared with an 8-to-10 percent rise in larger aircraft. The 110-130-seat CSeries overlap regional and mainline passenger jet markets.

Bombardier is also tasked with winning orders for its regional Q400 turboprop, which sources say the company considered selling. The plane holds barely a quarter of a market that is dominated by ATR, a prop-making joint venture between Airbus and Italian group Leonardo.

Such a disparity in sales can turn into a nightmare for the losing planemaker as its adversary benefits from higher volumes to bring down unit costs, which in turn help it sell more.

Bombardier’s Cromer has appointed an executive to pursue its plan to outsource the Q400’s cockpit and wings from Toronto, which would make the prop more competitive with lower-cost ATR, the memo said.

“We’ve got a backlog now so that allows us to evaluate all the outsourcing possibilities,” the source said.

The Q400 will continue to be produced at a plant in Canada’s largest city Toronto, which was recently sold by Bombardier but remains under lease for 3 to 5 years, until a new site can be located.

Bombardier said in a statement that is “constantly looking at strategic options for all our businesses.”

The company will also step up marketing campaigns in India and Africa, aiming to persuade airlines to pick the longer-range Q400s to connect cities with secondary destinations which either do not have service or are served by jets that have higher operating costs.

India has emerged as a fast-growing market for turboprops, benefiting both ATR and Bombardier, which won its largest single order to date for the planes last year from Indian low cost carrier SpiceJet.

Promoting the Q400 for underserved markets in Africa also helped win a recent order from Ethiopian Airlines..

But the African market also has risks, with Angola’s president recently telling Euronews that a domestic airline startup was a “fictitious company,” casting doubt on its order of 6 Q400s.

(Story by Allison Lampert, Editing by Tim Hepher and Edward Tobin)

www.bombardier.com

Airbus Weighing New Long-Range A321

PARIS (Reuters) – Airbus is considering adding extra endurance to the longest-range version of its A321 passenger jet in a further effort to pre-empt a potential new mid-market jet being studied by U.S. rival Boeing, industry sources said.

A new version called the A321XLR is the latest study on the drawing board in a battle of wits as both jetmakers battle for supremacy in the 200-270-seat segment, valued by analysts at hundreds of billion of dollars over 20 years.

The proposed new A321XLR would carry extra fuel and expand the range of the A321LR aircraft, which recently claimed a long-distance record for single-aisle jets in testing, the sources said, asking not to be named as the idea remains confidential.

It is expected to be aimed at North American carriers, whose ordering decisions could be decisive as Boeing weighs up whether to go ahead with plans for a new ‘middle-of-the-market’ aircraft.

“We do not comment on our product policy,” an Airbus spokesman said.

Noting that Airbus had 80 percent of sales in the A321 category, the spokesman added, “We are under no pressure”.

Airbus has been heavily outselling Boeing in the lower end of the 200-270-seat segment with the single-aisle A321, while Boeing has been dominating at the upper end with strong sales of the 787 Dreamliner at the expense of the Airbus A330neo.

This is the space into which Boeing proposes launching its 220-270 seat mid-market jet, a hybrid with the twin-aisle cabin of a wide-body jet but the smaller cargo space of a single-aisle plane thanks to a novel shape designed to fly more efficiently.

Airbus has been toying with several proposals to extend the A321’s advantage and try to limit the impact of Boeing’s new plane or even prompt its rival to abandon the idea.

Airbus says the A321LR, due to enter service this year, will have a maximum range of to 4,000 nautical miles (7,400 km). Boeing says the 737 MAX 10, the largest member of its competing 737 family, has a range of 3,300 nm.

JUGGLING RISKS

In a surprise move, Airbus previously halted work on a study dubbed A320neo-plus, Reuters reported in April.

The advanced blueprint would have featured increased fuel capacity, a longer fuselage and improvements to the A321’s wing.

A longer-term project, code-named A320neo-plus-plus,” with an all-new carbon-fibre wing, has also been put to one side.

By halting the studies, Airbus aims to force Boeing to show its hand on the middle-market segment before risking its own capital with a response, people familiar with the decision said.

But others say doing nothing is not without risk since failing to defend the profitable A321 could encourage Boeing to launch its newer jet. “If you do it, you have to move quickly,” an industry source said, referring to plans to improve the A321.

The A321XLR – with more fuel capacity but no extra seats or aerodynamic redesign – is a compromise bet that Airbus hopes will fend off Boeing for the smallest upfront investment.

In an interview last week, Boeing’s sales chief said it would take the time needed to decide whether to launch its new jet, rejecting suggestions that it is dragging its feet.

“We are doing our due diligence,” senior vice-president Ihssane Mounir told Reuters.

The jet is widely expected to be developed in two versions.

Boeing is looking at a product that is “a little bigger than an A321 but goes a lot further” and “about the size of the A330 but has a lot better efficiency,” he said.

Speaking to Reuters earlier this month, Airbus President Guillaume Faury deflected questions about A321 revamp plans.

“Airbus like any company has different options and is looking at the future,” he said.

(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Richard Lough/Keith Weir)

Airbus Warns On European Fighter Programme

BERLIN (Reuters) – European efforts to develop a next-generation military combat jet will end in disaster if individual governments insist on dictating specific suppliers or sites, the chief executive of European aerospace firm Airbus (AIR.PA) warned on Friday.

Airbus CEO Tom Enders told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper that a decision by Germany and France to develop a new “Future Combat Air System” was an important step towards expanding European defence cooperation.

He said Airbus and Dassault Aviation (AVMD.PA) had come to agreement surprisingly quickly on their respective roles in the fighter jet project, but warned governments against trying to influence the process.

“It will be a success if we don’t let governments interfere with their demands for the use of specific suppliers and locations in certain countries. That will only lead to disaster,” Enders told the newspaper.

Similar issues have cost Airbus dearly, said Enders, who has often criticised the way the multi-nation A400M military transport plane programme was structured when it began. Airbus took a further 1.3 billion euro (1.1 billion pounds) charge on the troubled programme in February.

“I hope that European companies will insist that future multilateral programmes have clear leadership structures and reasonable technical requirements and timetables,” he told the newspaper.

Airbus, which builds the Eurofighter Typhoon, and Dassault, which builds the Rafale jet, signed an initial agreement in April to cooperate on the new air combat system, with an eye to replacing current fighter jets by around 2035-2040.

Enders also called for Germany to move forward more boldly on closer European defence integration, citing concerns about what he called the “deplorable” state of the German military after years of neglect.

One key step would be to introduce majority-rule decisions in European foreign policy, replacing the current requirement for unanimous decisions, Enders said.

“Europe can only safeguard its interests if it is unified. It’s burning all around us,” the Airbus executive said, citing escalating tensions with the United States, difficult ties with China and Russia, and increasing tensions within the EU itself.

He urged EU officials and member countries to focus less on EU budget debates and more on strengthening security, securing Europe’s borders and moving forward on a joint foreign and defence policy.

The EU also needed to look at tax cuts pushed through by U.S. President Donald Trump that were providing a big incentive for companies to invest there, he said.

“If we in Europe continue to have high government spending and thereby high taxes, we will fall behind,” he said. “The low tax rates and the threatened protectionism are a strong incentive to invest more there.”

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Mark Potter)

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