Boeing lifts industry demand forecast as air show deals
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[July 17, 2018]
By Eric M. Johnson and Victoria Bryan
FARNBOROUGH, England (Reuters) - Boeing <BA.N>
raised its rolling 20-year industry forecast for passenger and cargo
aircraft on Tuesday, as a steady flow of deals on day two of the
Farnborough Airshow underscored the industry's resilience to rising
global trade tensions.
The world's biggest planemaker predicted 42,700 industry deliveries over
the next two decades, up three percent from its estimate of 41,030 a
year ago. That would be worth $6.3 trillion at list prices versus last
year's $6.1 trillion forecast.
The U.S. group and European rival Airbus saw brisk trade on the opening
day of the air show near London, and that continued on Tuesday, with
Russian airline Volga Dnepr committing to buying Boeing freighters worth
$11.8 billion at list prices, and Airbus announcing a provisional deal
with an unidentified customer for 100 A320 family jets.
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But analysts said many of the deals firmed up provisional agreements,
disclosed previously unidentified buyers or changed existing orders,
making it hard to gauge the true level of demand.
Rising oil prices and interest rates, trade tensions and uncertainty
over Britain's departure from the European Union all pose a risk to an
eight-year boom in civil aviation, which has boosted industry order
books and share prices.
Boeing's forecasts underscored the sector's reliance on emerging markets
in general and China in particular, making the U.S. planemaker
especially vulnerable should trade tensions between Washington and China
escalate into a full trade war.
Boeing, which calls itself America's biggest exporter, delivered more
than one out of every four jetliners it made last year to customers in
China, one of the world's fast-growing aircraft markets.
Boeing's vice-president of commercial marketing Randy Tinseth told a
news briefing that China looked set to overtake the United States as the
world's biggest domestic air travel market in 10-15 years.
But he declined to be drawn into commenting on U.S. trade policy,
saying: "We are going to focus on what we can control."
To view a graphic on Airbus, Boeing vs US benchmark from 2008-2018,
click: https://reut.rs/2JtcJG2
INTENSIFYING COMPETITION
Dominating Boeing's upbeat outlook was a five percent increase in the
forecast for single-aisle aircraft, such as the Boeing 737 and Airbus
A320 families, underpinned by an unchanged prediction for average global
traffic growth of 4.7 percent.
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A Boeing 787 puts on a display at the Farnborough Airshow, in
Farnborough, Britain July 16, 2018. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
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The Chicago-based planemaker now sees 31,360 deliveries in the medium-haul,
single-aisle category, the cash cow of the world's top two planemakers and
popular with low-cost airlines.
Two weeks ago, Airbus <AIR.PA> raised its own rolling forecast for industry
deliveries by more than seven percent and revamped the way it predicts demand,
introducing new plane categories from 'Small' to 'Extra-Large' and blurring the
traditional boundaries between aircraft types. Boeing's Tinseth said Airbus
sought to show it was winning a sizable share of the aircraft market. "Let me
make one thing clear," Tinseth said. "By every measure, in every way, our
wide-bodies are winning. Period." Even so, Boeing lowered its wide-body delivery
forecast by 140 aircraft to 8,070, saying higher deliveries over the last year
and longer-range single-aisle planes ate into the rolling forecast.
Boeing saw a small increase in demand in the cargo market, a barometer of trade
and business confidence, forecasting 980 new freighters from a projected 920 a
year ago, fueled by the growth of e-commerce, particularly in China. The
planemaker unveiled a volley of freight orders in the first two days of the
Farnborough show.
Boeing's overall forecast tally is a bigger number partly because it counts
aircraft with 90 seats or more, whereas Airbus starts at 100 seats. The
smaller-end of the aircraft market has seen its biggest shake-up in decades
after Airbus closed a deal to buy Bombardier's <BBDb.TO> 110-130-seat CSeries
jet, mirrored last week by Boeing's tentative deal to acquire the commercial
unit of Brazil's Embraer SA <EMBR3.SA>. Boeing shaved its forecast for the
regional jet fleet to 2,320 deliveries.
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Analysts expect Boeing and Airbus to use their scale to heap pressure on
suppliers to lower costs, which could trigger consolidation. Tinseth said
Boeing's market assessment could change if regional jets become "a lot more
efficient or a lot lower cost to operate, and maybe there is a possibility
pricing might change." "Anytime that happens, demand will go where the lowest
potential cost is," he added.
(Additional reporting by Tim Hepher, Sarah Young, Mike Stone and Andrea Shala,
Editing by Mark Potter)
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