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		Boeing crisis, trade tensions cast pall over air show
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		 [June 17, 2019]  By 
		Eric M. Johnson, Andrea Shalal and Tim Hepher 
 PARIS (Reuters) - Safety concerns, trade 
		wars and growing security tensions in the Gulf are dampening spirits at 
		the world's largest planemakers as they arrive at this week's Paris 
		Airshow with little to celebrate despite bulging order books.
 
 The aerospace industry's marquee event is a chance to take the pulse of 
		the $150-billion-a-year commercial aircraft industry, which many 
		analysts believe is entering a slowdown due to global pressures from 
		trade tensions to flagging economies, highlighted by a profit warning 
		from Lufthansa late on Sunday.
 
 Humbled by the grounding of its 737 MAX in the wake of two fatal 
		crashes, U.S. planemaker Boeing will be looking to reassure customers 
		and suppliers about the plane's future and allay criticism of its 
		handling of the months-long crisis.
 
 "This is a defining moment for Boeing. It's given us pause. We are very 
		reflective and we're going to learn," Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg 
		pledged on Sunday.
 
		
		 
		
 The grounding of the latest version of the world's most-sold jet over 
		safety concerns has rattled suppliers and fazed rival Airbus, which is 
		avoiding the traditional baiting of Boeing while remaining distracted by 
		its own corruption probe.
 
 Aerospace executives on both sides of the Atlantic are concerned about 
		the impact of the crisis on public confidence in air travel and the risk 
		of a backlash that could drive a wedge between regulators and undermine 
		the plane certification system.
 
 Airlines that rushed to buy the fuel-efficient MAX are taking a hit to 
		profits since having to cancel thousands of flights following the 
		worldwide grounding in March.
 
 Even the planned launch of a new longer-range version of the successful 
		A320neo jet family from Airbus, the A321XLR, is unlikely to dispel the 
		industry's uncertainty, analysts said.
 
 The planemaker is hoping to launch the plane with up to 200 orders with 
		the support of at least one major U.S. buyer such as American Airlines 
		but faces a last-minute scramble to win deals.
 
 "Boeing's MAX crisis isn't the most ominous dark cloud, since it can be 
		solved, but traffic numbers are genuinely scary," said Teal Group 
		aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia.
 
 "If March and April are a sign of things to come, we're looking at 
		broader industry demand and capacity problems."
 
 "Net orders might be the lowest in years," Aboulafia added.
 
 Others dismiss fears of a downturn, citing the growth of the middle 
		class in Asia and the need for airlines to buy new planes to meet 
		environmental targets.
 
 "The only solution that the industry has is the newest most 
		fuel-efficient aircraft," John Plueger, Chief Executive of Air Lease 
		Corp, told Reuters. "So that replacement cycle is going to continue."
 
 "We're talking to so many airlines who still want more aircraft, and 
		there's really been no lessening of those discussions," he said.
 
 GULF TENSIONS
 
 Boeing is delaying decisions on the launch of a possible new aircraft, 
		the mid-sized NMA, to give full attention to the 737 MAX and last-minute 
		engine trouble on the forthcoming 777X, industry sources said.
 
		
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			A man walks past an Bombardier Q400 of Indian airline SpiceJet on 
			static display, at the eve of the opening of the 53rd International 
			Paris Air Show at Le Bourget Airport near Paris, France, June 16 
			2019. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol 
            
			 
But it could unveil a number of deals favoring widebody jets where it has the 
upper hand against Airbus, including at least a dozen 787 aircraft for Korean 
Air Lines and some demand for 777 freighters. Airbus is meanwhile set to confirm 
an order for A330neo jets from Virgin Atlantic. 
"We'll have some orders flow. We anticipate some widebody orders that you'll be 
hearing about through the week. But that's not our focus for the show," 
Muilenburg told reporters. 
Robert Stallard of Vertical Research Partners expects roughly 800 aircraft 
orders at the show, but noted it can be hard to tell which are truly new, firm 
business or old orders, or switched models. That compares with some 959 orders 
and commitments at the Farnborough Airshow last year.
 Some analysts pegged the likely total closer to 400.
 
 Although slowing, a multi-year boom in airline orders is still trickling down to 
suppliers such as engine makers. French-American CFM International is set to 
announce a record order by units for over 600 engines from India's IndiGo.
 
The June 17-23 show is not only about jetliner deals, but also a magnet for many 
of the world's arms buyers who come to preview the latest military equipment, 
from anti-aircraft missiles to hotly sought cyber war-fighting capabilities.
 French President Emmanuel Macron will open the show by unveiling a mock-up of a 
proposed new fighter as France and Germany sign a deal for its development.
 
 
Industry insiders will also weigh the merits and potential fallout of United 
Technologies Corp's planned $121 billion tie-up with defense contractor Raytheon 
Co.
 The deal would potentially upend the aerospace sector, creating a conglomerate 
spanning commercial aviation and defense and putting pressure on major suppliers 
such as Honeywell and General Electric.
 
 Air show delegates are also watching a face-off between the United States and 
Iran in the Gulf. The United States blames Iran for attacks on two oil tankers 
in a vital shipping route that have raised fears of broader confrontation in the 
region.
 
 In another political row with implications for arms firms attending the show, 
the United States has threatened to cancel Turkey's participation in the 
Lockheed F-35 fighter jet program over Ankara's purchase of a Russian radar 
system.
 
 Watching the show attentively is China, whose own aerospace ambitions are 
growing at a time when U.S.-China trade tensions are rising ahead of a possible 
meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping 
this month.
 
 (Additional reporting by Cyril Altmeyerhenzien, Laurence Frost, Alistair Smout; 
Editing by Mark Potter and Sonya Hepinstall)
 
				 
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