PARIS - Airbus
parent EADS said Tuesday that the flagship A380 superjumbo jet will be delayed
for another year and Virgin Atlantic and Emirates ! the plane's biggest customer
! hinted that the new setbacks could lead to order cancelations.
In a statement issued after its second board
meeting in four days, EADS said the latest delays will cut an extra 2.8 billion
euros ($3.6 billion) off operating profit and announced a restructuring plan to
cut costs and boost productivity at Airbus.
Airbus sees "no significant signs" that
cancelations are likely from any of its A380 customers, CEO Christian Streiff
said during a conference call with reporters and analysts. "Until now,
everybody's still on board."
But Dubai-based Emirates signaled that its
bumper 45-plane order, worth over $13 billion at list prices, could be in doubt
after suffering a further delay of 10 months.
"This is a very serious issue for Emirates and
the company is now reviewing all its options," Chief Executive Tim Clark said in
an e-mailed statement.
Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. spokesman Paul
Charles said the carrier will be reviewing its six-plane order at an Oct. 12
board meeting, with "all options" on the table. "The depths of the delays have
serious implications," he said.
But Air France and Lufthansa said they were
still committed to the plane despite a new one-year delay to their
deliveries.
While Air France "can only regret" the latest
delays, the airline said in a statement, they will have no impact on its growth
strategy.
"We're still convinced that the A380 is a
success story and the A380 is a growth aircraft," Lufthansa spokeswoman Stefanie
Stotz said.
Airbus CEO Streiff reiterated Tuesday that the
latest production holdups ! which leave the program two years behind its
original schedule ! were caused entirely by problems with the installation of
the 300 miles of wiring aboard each plane. "This is the only weak link in the
production chain," Streiff said.
Emirates, which had originally been scheduled
to take delivery of an A380 this month, will receive the first plane 22 months
late. Lufthansa now expects to get its first A380 between May and September
2009, and Air France said its first delivery has been pushed back to the second
quarter of 2009.
Airbus has been discussing the latest holdups
with airlines in recent days as it tries to gauge the likely compensation bill.
EADS had confirmed last month that the plane would be delayed a third time,
without giving details.
EADS shares had plunged 26 percent on June 14
after Airbus announced a second delay of six months to the 555-seater A380 and a
2 billion euro ($2.6 billion) profit warning. Tuesday's announcement takes the
total financial impact of program delays to 4.8 billion euros ($6.1 billion)
over four years.
The world's largest passenger jet has so far
won 134 orders from 14 airlines and leasing companies and a further 25 for its
freighter version.
The June revelations led to the sacking of
Airbus boss Gustav Humbert and EADS co-CEO Noel Forgeard ! who remains under
investigation by market authorities after it emerged that he exercised stock
options to make a profit of 2.5 million euros ($3.2 million) just weeks before
ordering an internal probe into the production problems.
Airbus said Tuesday that A380 launch customer
Singapore Airlines will receive its first jet in October next year ! the only
delivery promised for 2007. Until recently, Airbus had maintained that the first
superjumbo would be delivered to launch customer Singapore Airlines by December
this year, on schedule.
In June, Airbus had already slashed its
delivery targets to nine planes from 25 in 2007; to 28 from 35 in 2008; and to
40 from 45 in 2009. EADS further reduced those forecasts Tuesday, pledging 13
deliveries in 2008 and 25 in 2009.
The defense group confirmed that it now expects
to make a loss on some of the Airbus A380 sales contracts, warning of a 600
million euros ($760 million) charge this year to cover those losses. The A380
program will not generate positive operating earnings until 2010, EADS
predicted.
The ripple effect of the fresh A380 delay is
likely to hurt the group's industrial shareholders and to benefit U.S. rival
Boeing Co., which is developing a 400- to 500-seat version of its 747 jumbo to
compete with the A380.
German automaker DaimlerChrysler AG ! which
owns 22.5 percent of EADS ! said it will review its own operating profit
guidance as a result of the Airbus problems. Shares of Boeing rose $1.81, or 2.3
percent, to close at $81.78 on the New York Stock Exchange.
EADS also announced the launch of a new
cost-cutting program to counter the impact of A380 delays as well as the weaker
dollar and growing competition from Boeing. EADS gave few details of the plan
but said it aims to generate annual cost savings of 2 billion euros ($2.6
billion) from 2010.
Management oversight of Airbus is also being
tightened up at EADS ! expected soon to buy the 20 percent of the aircraft maker
that it does not already own from Britain's BAE Systems PLC. BAE shareholders
vote Wednesday on a management recommendation to go ahead with the 2.75 billion
euro ($3.5 billion) sale.
Shares in European Aeronautic Defence and Space
Co., which had fallen recently in anticipation of the A380 delays, closed 1.1
percent higher at 22.65 euros ($28.85) in Paris before the company's statement,
but after those issued by Emirates and Lufthansa.