Emirates Chief Warns of `Gathering Storm’ From Discount Rivals

Emirates President Tim Clark said he’s bracing for a “gathering storm” as low-cost airlines encroach on the inter-continental routes around which the biggest long-haul carrier has built its business. Dubai-based Emirates sees threats across all markets from rivals spanning Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA to the Scoot unit of Singapore Airlines Ltd., Clark said Thursday in Berlin.

Emirates Invites Barflies to Pull Up a Seat With A380 Makeover

Flying bars that cater to premium passengers on the world’s biggest fleet of A380 superjumbos are set for a saloon-style upgrade as Gulf carrier Emirates seeks to use the sky-high hangouts to lure affluent travelers. Out will go the semicircular benches on which passengers have perched since Emirates introduced the on-board lounges almost a decade ago, to be replaced by an altogether more comfortable setup featuring a table for four located either side of the counter and below the superjumbo’s windows.

Boeing’s Charleston Plant Enters a New Age as It Turns Out the First 787-10

Boeing’s plant in Charleston, S.C., just had the most dramatic week in its history, a week that made it seem that the sky is the limit for the future of the five-year-old plant. On Feb. 15, plant workers voted overwhelming not to join the International Association of Machinists, seemingly reaffirming right-to-work South Carolina’s success in 2009 in luring Boeing here, far from the Washington workers who had built all of its legacy commercial aircraft for decades.

BAE Systems Annual Profit Jumps 13% on U.S. Spending Boost

BAE Systems Plc, Europe’s biggest defense company, posted a 13 percent gain in full-year earnings as U.S. military spending picked up and its planes and weapons were deployed in wars in Syria and Yemen. Underlying earnings before interest, tax and amortization rose to 1.91 billion pounds from 1.68 billion pounds a year earlier, the London-based maker of Eurofighter warplanes said in a statement Wednesday.

BAE Systems Full-Year Profit Jumps 13% on U.S. Spending Revival

BAE Systems Plc, Europe’s biggest defense company, posted a 13 percent gain in full-year earnings as U.S. military spending picked up and its planes and weapons were deployed in wars in Syria and Yemen. Underlying earnings before interest, tax and amortization rose to 1.91 billion pounds from 1.68 billion pounds a year earlier, the London-based maker of Eurofighter warplanes said in a statement Wednesday.

Airbus profit dives on problems with A400M military jet

This Thursday, June 20, 2013, file photo shows an Airbus A400M performing its demonstration flight during the 50th Paris Air Show at Le Bourget airport, north of Paris, France. Surprise new costs for the long-troubled Airbus A400M military jet sent the European planemaker’s profits plunging last year despite a rise in commercial aircraft deliveries, Airbus reported Wednesday Feb. 22, 2017.

Airbus Earnings Slide on A350 Costs, A320Neo Engine Holdups

Airbus Group SE’s earnings fell 3.6 percent last year as a late surge in aircraft deliveries failed to offset costs from ramping up output of the A350 twin-aisle model and the impact of engine glitches that curbed handovers of the latest A320 narrow-body. Earnings before interest and tax before one-time items dropped to 3.96 billion euros in 2016 from 4.11 billion euros a year earlier, Toulouse, France-based Airbus said in a statement Wednesday.

The economic reality behind the Boeing plane Trump showed off

Interpretation of the news based on evidence, including data, as well as anticipating how events might unfold based on past events NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — President Trump visited a Boeing factory Friday to show off the company’s newest model of the 787 Dreamliner , the latest in a series of planes that experts describe as a marvel of aeronautical engineering. The fuel-efficient construction allows the newest model to fly from London to Cape Town, South Africa, without refueling – an extraordinary distance for a 330-passenger There is one number on which the Dreamliners are still coming up short, however: return on investment.

What’s On Our Radar: February 17, 2017

President Trump lambasted the media for over 70 minutes yesterday in his first solo press conference as President of the United States. He tore into the press corps, labeling some organizations as “fake news” and demanding fair treatment.

Boeing Wins $13.8B Singapore Airlines Order

Singapore Airlines announced a $13.8 billion order to buy 39 Boeing wide-body aircraft as it pursues expansion opportunities, a setback for the U.S. planemaker’s rival Airbus Group in the fight for long-term orders. Airbus Group has flagged its intention to build a bigger version of its A350, although these plans have been placed on hold amid uncertainty over demand for wide-body jets.

Canada Defends Bombardier Aid as Brazil Moves on Trade Challenge

Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains said Canada’s financial aid package for Bombardier Inc. is consistent with trade rules, as Brazil pushed for a hearing in front of the World Trade Organization on what it considers unfair subsidies. The Brazilian government formally sought “consultations” early Wednesday with Canada in front of the WTO with the blessing of Bombardier’s South American rival Embraer SA, according to a statement from that company.

Boeing Beats Earnings Estimates, Sees Stronger 2017 Plane Deliveries

Helped by the Dreamliner, Boeing posted much better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday and said it expects to see solid plane deliveries in the coming year. Boeing said earnings for the three months ended in December came in at $2.47 a share, well ahead of the $2.35 a share expected by analysts and more than 50% higher than in the same period last year.

Should You Buy an Airline Stock Which Nearly Doubled In 2016?

I don’t have a fear of flying, or a fear of heights, but I do have a fear of buying stocks that have flown extremely high during the previous 12 months. In 2016, many airline carriers’ shares booked quite modest gains, but not Panama-based Copa Holdings, S.A. , which operates subsidiaries Copa Airlines and Copa Columbia, and flies primarily in Latin America and the United States.

Airbus Talks Up Its U.S. Credentials Ahead of Trump Presidency

Airbus Group SE, the chief rival of America’s biggest exporter Boeing Co., asserted its bona fides as a U.S. manufacturer a week before Donald Trump assumes the presidency after a campaign spent complaining about unfair trade. Having a factory in Mobile, Alabama, that employs more than 1,000 people making A320 single-aisle jets shows Airbus’s commitment to the U.S., one of the biggest markets for its aircraft, Fabrice Bregier, who runs the European planemaker’s jetliner arm, said in an interview Wednesday.

Airbus Retains Order Lead Over Boeing With Late Sales Surge

Airbus Group SE booked 320 jetliner orders in December alone to rack up 731 sales for the year, extending its backlog and beating Boeing Co. In the last month of 2016 Airbus sold 98 new planes to Iran Air and 72 to Go Airlines India Pvt., while two other transactions saw 132 narrow-bodies purchased by buyers whose identities weren’t disclosed, according to figures released by the Toulouse, France-based company Wednesday.

Rolls Royce Shares Still Getting Crushed — Here’s New Reason Why

Rolls Royce stock slumped Thursday after analysts at JP Morgan cut their price target for the shares less than a month before the engine manufacturer reports full-year results. JP Morgan slashed its target to 730 pence , from 890 pence, in the latest sign of deteriorating investor sentiment toward the company – since it emerged Airbus has had to postpone a number of A380 deliveries.

Airbus A380 Woes Deepen as Emirates Delay Accelerates Cost Cuts

Airbus Group SE’s struggles with its A380 superjumbo are deepening as the planemaker delays deliveries of a dozen aircraft over the next two years to Emirates, the double-decker’s biggest buyer, potentially pushing the program into the red. Handovers of six A380s apiece originally planned for 2017 and 2018 will be shifted to a year later following an agreement between Emirates and engine supplier Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc, Airbus said Tuesday in an e-mailed statement.

Airbus’s A380 Woes Deepen as Top Buyer Emirates Delays Jets

Airbus Group SE’s struggles with its A380 superjumbo jet are deepening as the planemaker delays deliveries of a dozen aircraft over the next two years to Emirates, the double-decker’s biggest customer. To make up for the financial drag from the tardier handovers, Airbus will accelerate cost cuts, according to an e-mailed company statement late Tuesday.

Airbus’s A380 Woes Deepen as Jets Delayed for Top Buyer Emirates

Airbus Group SE’s struggles with its A380 superjumbo jet are deepening as the planemaker delays deliveries of a dozen aircraft over the next two years to Emirates, the double-decker’s biggest customer. To make up for the financial drag from the tardier handovers, Airbus will accelerate cost cuts, according to an e-mailed company statement Tuesday.

Airbus to Slow A380 Production in 2017 in Accord With Emirates

Airbus Group SE will put off a dozen deliveries of the A380 plane in the next two years following an agreement with Emirates, its largest customer for the model, as demand continues to fade for the double-decker. Handovers of six A380s apiece that were originally planned for 2017 and 2018 will be shifted to a year later following an agreement with Emirates and engine supplier Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc, the Toulouse, France-based planemaker said Tuesday in an e-mailed statement.

Air-Launched Orbital Rockets: Orbital ATK Shows Virgin Galactic How It’s Done

For years, Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic has been trying to invent a better way to launch rockets into space. Instead of launching from Earth in a fiery blast and a cloud of dust, Virgin Galactic aims to carry a “SpaceShipTwo” spaceship into the stratosphere, strapped to the belly of a “WhiteKnightTwo” mothership — then detach the former from the latter, and rocket to 62 miles above sea level.

Trump Summons Contractors to Mar-a-Lago Over Spending

The two largest U.S. defense contractors said Wednesday they would seek to control their costs after President-elect Donald Trump summoned them and a bevy of top Pentagon officials to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida to discuss military spending. “We’re trying to get costs down, costs,” Trump told reporters in brief remarks outside the resort after the officers departed.