Airbus in crisis and uncertainty
The price of shares in Airbus parent company slumped 6.71% to 21.13 euros.
The price of shares in Airbus parent company EADS slumped to show a mid-day loss of 6.71% to 21.13 euros hours before management was to outline a restructuring plan to staff.
EADS announced a third-round of delivery delays, a doubling of expected losses, a total cash-flow reduction of 6.3 billion euros ($8 billion), and a drastic plan to cut costs, in a long-awaited statement late on Tuesday.
But it provided few specific details publicly to investors and customers who were first informed of problems, essentially over complex cabling and wiring, in June 2005.
They were then hit by a shock announcement of further delays in June 2006 and have since been waiting for details of the bottlenecks and of a recovery plan for the group.
And last week it emerged that flight turbulence caused by the A380 will delay the flow of following airline traffic in the air and at airports.
Analysts at JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley said the share price now covered the latest risk factors and could recover. However, Deutsche Bank analysts commented that “the (restructuring) plan is only at an initial stage and will not be fully detailed until the end of the year” and that “even if it appears to be very ambitious, questions risk being asked about its credibility.”
Brokers at UBS bank said they were concerned that the group might yet announce an increase in costs for its A350 medium-range airliner and for the A400M military aircraft programmes. The crisis also coincides with the beginning of campaigning for a French presidential election in which any plans by big industrial groups to shed jobs is likely to cause controversy.
The company has already warned of cuts in the 55,000-strong worldwide workforce. In response to the delays, Australian airline Qantas said it had begun to review its needs for airliner capacity, and the chief executive of Emirates airline, Tim Clark, said: “This is a very serious issue for Emirates and the company is now reviewing all its options.”
Virgin Atlantic said in London that the delays had “serious implications” and that it would review its order for six planes.
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