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the aerospace duopoly
Jet lag for Boeing but Airbus orders pour in
David Gow
Tuesday July 29, 2003
The Guardian
Airbus, the European plane-maker, yesterday outshone its US rival, Boeing,
by announcing 600 orders for the next two years in an upbeat assessment of
the aviation market.
Rainer Hertrich, co-chief executive of Eads, the European aerospace and
defence group which owns 80% of Airbus, said the industry was clearly
coming to the bottom of the cycle and there were signs of recovery all
over the world. His comments contrasted with more cautious remarks last
week from Phil Condit, Boeing's chairman and chief executive, who spoke of
a recovery in 2005 at the earliest.
Mr Hertrich reaffirmed that Airbus would deliver 300 planes this year,
beating Boeing - which expects to sell 280 planes - for the first time. Mr
Condit said Boeing would deliver at most 290 planes and perhaps as few as
275 next year. Mr Hertrich's announcement of 600 firm orders in 2004-2005
indicates that Airbus expects to deliver at least 300 planes in each of
the next two years, though sources said some deliveries could be deferred.
Next year Airbus is counting on 118 orders from leasing companies, 79 from
Europe, 46 from north America, where airlines are being kept afloat by
federal aid, and just 27 from Asia where travel was hammered by the Sars
outbreak. Eads confirmed that fewer deliveries at Airbus, greater research
and development spending on the new A380 superjumbo, and the weaker US
dollar helped depress first-half earnings to ?592m (£420m) from ?775m in
2002.
Eads cheered investors by disclosing that its net cash remained strong at
?918m while its net exposure to customer financing - almost entirely from
Airbus - was a "conservative" ?1.6bn. The half-year figures were depressed
by a ?88m charge for restructuring the ailing space business, though Mr
Hertrich said Eads would probably book a further ?200m charge in the final
quarter.
The group, ramping up production of the Eurofighter and preparing for the
launch of the A400M military transporter, said growing defence orders
would boost sales and earnings this year and next.
- Thread context:
- Re: futures market military intelligence, (continued)
- feedin' at the trough,
Eubulides Tue 29 Jul 2003, 04:04 GMT
- the tickle on the wrist,
Eubulides Tue 29 Jul 2003, 03:18 GMT
- the aerospace duopoly,
Eubulides Tue 29 Jul 2003, 02:12 GMT
- the cost of job loss,
Eubulides Tue 29 Jul 2003, 01:26 GMT
- Fighting terrorism with blurry vision; the latest teachings of Paul Wolfowitz, or, would the real terrorist please stand up clearly,
Jurriaan Bendien Mon 28 Jul 2003, 22:53 GMT
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