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The company is reviewing its production plans and said a couple of deliveries scheduled for this year will shift into early 2010 as the superjumbo program struggles with "continuing production instability" and requests for delivery postponement from customers. EADS sounded an optimistic note regarding the future of the aircraft market, saying it is "cautiously envisaging an improvement of the economic and market conditions in the next months." October traffic suggests the worst is over in terms of falling passenger and cargo traffic, it said. Shares in the company rose 1.4 percent to euro13.34 in early trade in Paris as investors welcomed the brighter outlook. EADS said it is sticking to Airbus' target of 300 gross aircraft orders this year and 490 deliveries. At the end of September, Airbus had received 149 gross orders. In a separate announcement Monday, Airbus said Yemenia Airways has ordered 10 A320 aircraft in a deal with a list price of $700 million, its second of the Dubai Airshow. On Sunday, Airbus said it would sell 12 A350 XWB aircraft to Ethiopian Airlines. EADS' net cash position fell to euro8.1 billion compared with euro9.2 billion at the end of 2008. Airbus customer financing has "remained limited" so far this year, but EADS said it expects this to increase in the fourth quarter. Airbus, which accounts for around two-thirds of EADS' revenue, reported a 3 percent decline in third quarter revenue to euro6.2 billion and a 99 percent decline in EBIT to euro4 million.
[Associated
Press;
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