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Airbus reached a targeted production rate of 10 aircraft a month for its widebody A350 last year. Photo: Bloomberg

Boeing beats European rival Airbus in global aircraft order race for the first time since 2012

  • Airbus registers 747 orders compared to Boeing’s 893
  • Airbus was outsold three to one by Boeing for a second year in the high-margin widebody segment
Aviation

Airbus abandoned a five-year winning streak in the race for jetliner orders in 2018, slumping to its lowest share of the US$150 billion jet market in six years but narrowing a gap against US rival Boeing Co in aeroplane deliveries.

The European company said it had won 747 net orders, down 33 per cent from 2017 despite a hefty contribution from the Canadian A220 jet which it took over in July. Boeing won the order race for the first time since 2012 with 893 orders.

Why China is no closer to rivalling Boeing or Airbus

Airbus delivered 800 jets, up 11 per cent, including 20 of the small A220 model, leaving Boeing as the world’s largest planemaker by manufacturing volume for a seventh straight year.

Although Boeing missed its delivery target and Airbus had previously lowered its goal due to strains on the industry’s global supply chain, strong demand for passenger jets expanded total deliveries by 8 per cent, the fastest pace in six years.

Still, investors are watching for signs that a longer-than-usual aerospace cycle is fraying amid concerns over key markets like China, even though some slowdown in orders had been expected as manufacturers digest record production backlogs.

The 787 has proved to be a winner for Boeing. Photo: AFP

Planemaking chief Guillaume Faury said Airbus had achieved a “healthy order intake”, with waiting lists for many new jets stretching up to seven years.

Insiders say its quest for new business has, however, been overshadowed in the past year by industrial problems, management changes and morale problems coinciding with a corruption probe.

It also faced a challenging annual comparison after its former sales chief retired with a swan song deal in 2017 for over 400 jets that analysts said had anticipated future demand.

A resurgent Boeing has meanwhile been cashing in on greater availability and declining costs for its flagship 787 Dreamliner, while struggling to regain lost ground in the lucrative segment for large narrowbody jets above 200 seats.

Highlighting the pressure Airbus has been facing in the market for high-margin widebody jets like the 787, the European company was outsold three to one by Boeing for a second year.

The order figures underscore Airbus’s decision to take over the lightweight but loss-making Bombardier CSeries aircraft, generating 135 orders worth US$12 billion at list prices.

Airbus took over Bombardier’s CSeries passenger plane, winning 135 orders worth US$12 billion at list prices. Photo: EPA-EFE

Without that boost, Airbus took just 41 per cent of the core market in which it competes with Boeing, the lowest since 2009.

Airbus’ Faury rejected the comparison, telling reporters the A220 was now “an integral part of the Airbus product range”.

He said Airbus had turned the corner after supplier problems sparked an year-end race to match the 800-unit delivery target.

“It has not been a walk in the park in 2018 and we hope to have a more steady industrial execution in 2019,” he said.

Airbus reached a targeted production rate of 10 aircraft a month for its widebody A350, company officials said.

Aircraft maker Boeing says it is playing peacemaker in US-China trade war and committed to Chinese investments

Among a handful of cancellations, Airbus officially recognised in its books the loss in 2014 of an order for 10 A380 superjumbos from Hong Kong Airlines, following negotiations.

The world’s largest airliner is mostly dependent on Dubai’s Emirates Airlines as Airbus slows output in the hope of a future upturn.

Some analysts say the record backlogs of Airbus and Boeing still include dozens of other jets unlikely to be delivered, but both companies insist they only post valid contracts.

“I think we are in a healthy situation to prepare the next couple of years,” Faury said.

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