Singapore Airlines places
$14 billion wide-body Boeing order
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[February 09, 2017]
By Anshuman Daga and Tim Hepher
SINGAPORE/PARIS
(Reuters) - Singapore Airlines (SIA) announced a provisional order
worth $13.8 billion at list prices to buy 39 Boeing wide-body planes on
Thursday as it battles Gulf carriers, dealing a blow to Airbus in the
key market for big twinjets.
SIA signed a letter of intent with Boeing for 20 777-9s and 19 787-10s
to tap additional passenger growth and to modernize its fleet over the
next decade. Additional options for the two aircraft types could take
the deal to as many as 51 aircraft.
The preliminary order is a boost for Boeing as it seeks to restore
momentum for the newest version of its long-haul 777, which after a
strong debut has not had a firm order in 20 months.
It is also expected to shore up export-related U.S. jobs at a time when
domestic manufacturing employment is a sensitive political issue under
U.S. President Donald Trump.
"The carrier is a demanding customer, and its fleet decisions usually
define market trends in the intermediate term," said Jefferies analyst
Howard Rubel in a note.
Airlines typically get discounts on jet orders and Rubel estimated the
deal's net value closer to $6.5 billion or about a tenth of the U.S.
planemaker's annual volume.
"While the deal may have been highly competitive, it is business in part
of the market that strengthens Boeing's positioning," he said.
The agreement, however, leaves a question mark over Airbus proposals to
develop a larger 400-seat version of its A350 passenger jet to compete
with the 406-seat Boeing 777-9.
Singapore's flagship carrier had been seen as a key potential launch
customer for the proposed jet, but the European planemaker last year
postponed a decision on whether to launch the new project amid pressure
on demand for wide-body jets.
The fact Airbus was not yet ready to make a definitive offer to supply
the new plane, relying instead on the 366-seat A350-1000, may have been
a handicap in the contest for Singapore's business, an industry source
said.
"Our priority is to certify and assure entry to service of the
A350-1000," an Airbus spokesman said, adding the two main existing
models represented a "good platform" for airline needs.
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Boeing's logo is seen during Japan Aerospace 2016 air show in Tokyo,
Japan, October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
LAUNCH CUSTOMER
SIA's significant orders and recent moves to extend some of its fuel-hedging
contracts to as long as five years show it is positioning itself for the next
phase of growth, said Shukor Yusof, analyst at Malaysian aviation consultancy
Endau Analytics.
"What's working for them is that they have very deep pockets and they are
putting some of that money to replace fleet and also looking at new
destinations," Yusof said.
SIA has been under pressure as demand weakens for long-haul travel amid tough
competition from Middle East network carriers.
SIA said this would be the airline's first order for the newest 777 variant that
is currently under development. SIA is already the launch customer for the
787-10, which is also currently in development, having placed an initial order
in 2013 for 30 aircraft for delivery from the 2018/19 financial year.The airline
operates a varied fleet with more than 50 current-generation 777s in service,
while subsidiaries SilkAir, Scoot and SIA Cargo also operate other Boeing
planes. Thursday's preliminary order was SIA's biggest Boeing deal by value.
It also operates other Airbus aircraft including the smaller A350-900 model and
the four-engined A380, the world's largest airliner, some of which could be
replaced by 777-9s.
The growth of the big twinjet is driven by advances in the largest engines,
sparking a parallel battle between Boeing ally General Electric and Airbus
supplier Rolls-Royce.
GE is the sole supplier of engines on the 777 and Rolls-Royce won the $1.7
billion order from SIA to power the 19 Boeing Dreamliner aircraft.
(Reporting by Anshuman Daga in SINGAPORE and Tim Hepher in PARIS; Additional
reporting by Shalini Nagarajan in BENGALURU; Editing by Keith Weir and Mark
Potter)
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