New Boeing jet to accelerate services shake-up
Send a link to a friend
[March 13, 2018]
By Tim Hepher
(Reuters) - Boeing Co <BA.N> is doubling
down on its landmark new strategy designed to muscle in on the business
of maintenance providers by making its next jet the laboratory for
in-house services that could radically alter the global business model
for selling planes.
Unlike Boeing's last all-new design, the 787 Dreamliner, its proposed
new mid-market plane will not bring a flood of revolutionary technical
designs to the drawing board.
But it will give the world's largest plane maker a chance to test its
new business approach of designing the plane so that it generates
lucrative services revenues for Boeing while also offering efficiencies
to airlines over the aircraft’s decades-long lifespan.
Along with production costs, the new approach could help Boeing decide
whether to invest the $15 billion or more in development needed to build
the jet.
"If we decide to launch, it's a big investment and it's an investment
that has to contemplate not only the product itself but all of our other
strategic objectives," Chairman and Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg
told Reuters.
"So you can imagine we would want to look at this airplane through the
lens of lifecycle value as we are growing our services business," he
said.
Until recently, Boeing and Europe's Airbus <AIR.PA> sold planes with
little involvement in the way they were operated and maintained.
Instead, that was work carried out by their own suppliers or third-party
shops.
Heavy outsourcing on jets like the 787 expanded the trend by leaving
suppliers - such as Mitsubishi Heavy Industries <7011.T>, which supplies
the 787's carbon wings - in command of key components.
While Boeing and others squeezed their balance sheets to launch jets,
many of their suppliers used their design influence to forge profitable
relationships directly with airlines as they conducted part swaps or
repairs required by regulators.
"That seems a little out of balance, doesn't it?" said Muilenburg,
describing how the pendulum is now swinging back to give Boeing more
control over parts and therefore the stream of aftermarket services that
comes with owning a part's design.
"We do take the majority of the risk in developing new products, and we
think that would cause us to want to gain the financial benefit of that
risk-taking for the long term," he said.
The long-term approach to the new jet is the latest evidence of changes
in the $180 billion aero-aftermarket as planemakers jostle with
suppliers - and even airlines - for control of repairs, training and
data in pursuit of higher margins.
Last year, Boeing centralized services formerly spread across the
company in a new division with a goal to more than treble sales to $50
billion in a decade.
The new unit posted operating margins of 15.4 percent last year,
compared with 16.1 percent that United Technologies Aerospace Systems <UTX.N>,
a major supplier, earned from selling new equipment, services and
aftermarket parts.
ENGINEERING DEPTH
The aftermarket is not entirely new to Boeing, and is common in defense,
where Muilenburg ran services between 2008 and 2009. Airbus set
ambitious internal targets last week and Canada's Bombardier Inc <BBDb.TO>
is banking on maintenance.
[to top of second column] |
President, Chairman and
CEO of The Boeing Company Dennis Muilenburg speaks at the "What's
Next?" conference in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., October 4, 2016.
REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
But after airplane demand peaked since 2014, Boeing has turned more aggressively
to parts and services to help meet a target of doubling margins to the mid-teens
by 2020. Its core jet margin widened to 9.6 percent last year from 3.4 percent
in 2016.
To support the strategy, Boeing is bringing back key in-house technology like
avionics - the brains of a modern jet -partly with an eye to future aftermarket
revenue.
"It is important that we build out vertical capabilities that sustain our
engineering depth...as airplanes become more digital," Muilenburg said, adding
that broader growth in the industry would also provide a boon to suppliers.
Suppliers say Boeing is also less willing than before to share risks - and
profits - with them on the systems they do build. Instead it wants them to build
to Boeing's designs rather than leaving them with keys to the all-important
aftermarket.
Already, there are signs the mid-market jet could see a swing away from
risk-sharing towards straight procurement deals,the head of a major supplier
told Reuters.
"It depends on the area of the airplane we are talking about but we are very
clear in our intent to grow our services business, and part of that is bringing
back inside some engineering and intellectual property," Muilenburg commented.
The downside of doing more by itself, suppliers and analysts say, is that Boeing
could weaken access to outside innovation, import risk and tie up capital and
finite engineering resources.
Depending on how far this goes, industry sources say it may also herald gradual
changes in patterns of cash generation.
While planemakers get paid on delivery, engine makers charge little upfront and
make money on services provided over years.
Some analysts say new plane manufacturer strategies suggest those business
models could start to converge and put pressure on them to be more generous with
discounts on jets.
Muilenburg declined to address pricing directly, but acknowledged Boeing's
cradle-to-grave services strategy could have some impact on the timing of future
income.
"The services business tends to be accretive to margin, but this does give us
the flexibility of where we drive margin in the business with the idea of
raising the bar overall," he said when asked if bundling services could lead to
bigger jet discounts.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Additional reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Edward
Tobin)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |