Further developments of the A321, Part 6

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By Bjorn Fehrm

November 23, 2023, © Leeham News: We do an article series about what can be the subsequent development for Airbus’ most popular aircraft, the A321neo. We looked at different changes to the aircraft in previous articles and the economics in short haul configuration. Now, we compare the capacity and economics of the different variants when configured for long-haul missions.

We use our Airliner Performance and Cost Model (APCM) to look at passenger capacity, seat-mile costs, and range.

Summary:

  • A stretched A321 is limited as a long-haul aircraft, as it needs additional fuel and additional takeoff weight to carry the fuel.
  • Long-haul variants of a stretched A321 will need the XLR center tank or the new, larger wing of an A32x to extend the range to long-haul values.

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Boeing beats Airbus in order tallies at Dubai Airshow thanks to widebody jetliner demand

By Dan Catchpole

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Nov. 20, 2023 © Leeham News: Boeing dominated the Dubai Airshow, racking up 313 orders—232 firm and 81 non-firm. Meanwhile, Airbus garnered only 86 orders, as of Friday, the last day of the biennial airshow.

Credit: Boeing

It was the first time that American aerospace giant has beaten its European competitor at Dubai since 2017. Heavy demand for twin-aisle aircraft helped Boeing land more orders.

A much anticipated mega order by Turkish Airlines for Airbus jetliners didn’t materialize. However, both entities said they plan to announce a significant order in the future.

Summary
  • Widebody orders lead narrowbody orders
  • Resurgent international travel demand drive order split
  • Performance problems soften demand for Airbus A350

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Airbus eyes carbon capture to broaden its eco arsenal

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By Gordon Smith

November 20, 2023, © Leeham News: Airbus’ flagship decarbonization initiative appears to be gaining momentum. The European OEM is betting big on Direct Air Carbon Capture and Storage (DAC) next-generation facilities that remove CO2 directly from the air to compensate for emissions produced by airline operations.

Airbus has described the technology as a “key bastion in the fight against climate change and the world’s transition to a net-zero energy system”. It has partnered with 1PointFive – a US partner of Canadian firm Carbon Engineering – to bring the innovative system to the aviation sector.

Last month, easyJet became the first airline to ink a deal with Airbus for the decarbonisation initiative. The OEM is offering carriers ‘carbon removal credits’ as part of a broader deal with 1PointFive. Read more

Further developments of the A321, Part 5

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By Bjorn Fehrm

November 16, 2023, © Leeham News: We have done an article series about what can be the subsequent development for Airbus’ most popular aircraft, the A321neo. We looked at different changes to the aircraft in previous articles. Now, we compare the capacity and economics of the different variants.

We use our Airliner Performance and Cost Model (APCM) to examine passenger capacity, range, and seat-mile costs.

Summary:
  • The stretched A321s have improved operating economics.
  • The question is if the cost and time of the projects are motivated versus keeping the A321s “as is” and then make a clean sheet replacement.

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Has Airbus pinned too much of its hopes on LCC growth?

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By Judson Rollins

November 14, 2023, © Leeham News: Much ink has been spilled over the bad – and increasingly worse – year for America’s low-cost carriers or LCCs. Frontier, JetBlue, Southwest, and Spirit have all reported disappointing results, with increasingly negative outlooks for the rest of this year and well into 2024.

Source: DigitalAirliners.com.

The future of the LCC model is increasingly murky, having historically depended on consistent double-digit capacity growth to spread fixed costs. Such rapid growth is imperiled in the short term by reluctant lower-income consumers, in the intermediate term by shortages of airplanes, parts, and skilled staff, and in the long term by a growing worldwide pilot shortage.

Boeing’s 737 MAX has its share of LCC exposure; LNA analysis puts it at 37% of unfilled orders. But Airbus’s A220 and A320 programs are even more intensely exposed, with 48% of combined orders coming from LCCs.

Will Airbus’s focus on selling to LCCs eventually return to haunt the OEM? We take a closer look.

Summary
  • US LCCs are hampered by excess capacity; is a shakeout coming?
  • Europe is brighter for now but faces near- and long-term constraints.
  • Airbus has more to lose than Boeing in a global LCC retreat.

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Airbus profits climb despite one-off charge

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By Gordon Smith

Nov 9, 2023, (c) Leeham News: Airbus struck a defiant tone on Wednesday as the company posted strong numbers for the first nine months of 2023. Despite supply chain headwinds, the European firm’s Q323 adjusted Earnings Before Interest and Taxes (EBIT) rose by 21% year-on-year to €1.013bn. The figure was influenced by increased commercial aircraft deliveries and the positive impact of currency hedging.

The robust performance of its civil portfolio was dampened by a net loss at Airbus’ Defence & Space division. The group took a hit of €400m relating to “updated estimates at the completion of certain satellite development programs” which were mainly recorded in the third quarter.

The headline figures for the first nine months of 2023 are as follows:
  • Revenues: €42.6bn
  • Adjusted EBIT: €3.6bn
  • Free cash flow (before Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) and customer financing): €1.0bn
  • 488 commercial aircraft delivered

For context, let’s compare these figures with those published at the same time last year. In its nine-month results for 2022, the OEM delivered 437 commercial aircraft, with revenues of €38.1bn generating an adjusted EBIT of €3.5bn. Free cash flow comprised €2.9bn.

Speaking during a follow-up investor call, Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury was bullish in his assessment. He said that the company is confirming its earnings target for 2023 and would be ramping up aircraft production in the years ahead: “We think we are well-placed to deliver around 161 planes to fulfill the guidance for the year. For those deliveries, we obviously have a high degree of visibility on parts, including engines.”

Faury’s positive outlook appeared slightly at odds with comments from other industry heavyweights in recent days. On Tuesday, Steven Udvar-Hazy from Air Lease Corporation suggested OEMs could miss their year-end goals as chronic engine supply issues persist.

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Spirit Focused on Delivering On Time and At Quality

By Dan Catchpole

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Nov. 6, 2023, © Leeham News: Spirit Aerosystems’ new CEO Pat Shanahan’s focus right now is “to restore confidence in the company” with its biggest customers—Airbus and Boeing.

During a Nov. 1st conference call discussing the company’s third quarter earnings, Shanahan said,  “I recognize we have disappointed our stakeholders.”

Shanahan just came on as chief executive in October to help turn around Spirit, which has been flailing, along with much of the aerospace supply chain. Boeing and Airbus will be watching Shanahan’s progress. He gained a reputation as Mr. Fix-It during his time at Boeing.

Summary
  • Market responds favorably to latest earnings report and management’s promises.
  • Shanahan says Spirit is on track to deliver more than 50 737 MAX airframes in 2025.
  • Goal is zero-quality issues.

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Further developments of the A321, Part 4

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By Bjorn Fehrm

October 26, 2023, © Leeham News: We do an article series about what can be the next development for Airbus’ most popular aircraft, the A321neo. We looked at a minimal makeover in Part 3; now, we make a larger change.

We use our Airliner Performance and Cost Model (APCM) to examine what a new wing and revised engines can bring regarding larger passenger capacity, range, and lower seat-mile costs.

Summary:
  • To increase the capacity significantly of the A321, a new wing is needed.
  • We design a new wing combined with uprated engines and look at the result.

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Lockheed bows out, Airbus plows ahead in USAF tanker procurement; Boeing favored

By Scott Hamilton

Oct. 24, 2023, © Leeham News: Lockheed Martin Co. (LMCO) threw in the towel on Oct. 23, announcing it will not submit information to the US Air Force for the KC-Y aerial refueling tanker procurement.

Lockheed Martin drops out of the KC-Y US Air Force tanker procurement for an aerial refueling tanker. Airbus, its partner, will proceed alone. Credit: Lockheed Martin.

But its partner, Airbus, quickly said it will respond to the USAF’s Request for Information (RFI).

“Airbus remains committed to providing the U.S. Air Force and our warfighters with the most modern and capable tanker on the market and will formally respond to the United States Air Force KC-135 recapitalization RFI. The A330 U.S.-MRTT is a reliable choice for the U.S. Air Force: one that will deliver affordability, proven performance, and unmatched capabilities.”

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Order risk for Airbus: Warning flags

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By the Leeham News Team

Oct. 16, 2023, © Leeham News: Airbus and Boeing have airplane order backlogs exceeding 10,000 aircraft. Most of the respective production lines are sold out to 2026 and even beyond 2030. Airlines and lessors must place orders soon to get into the queue. If early delivery positions are sought, the customers must hope Airbus and Boeing can find a few slots—but there won’t be many.

Like airlines selling their seats, Airbus and Boeing overbook production slots. The OEMs bet on boosting production rates, customers willing to defer deliveries (for whatever reason), cancellations to open earlier slots, or to meet delivery commitments. These bets sometimes pay off—and sometimes they don’t.

Today, LNA looks at the Top Customers of each product line and assesses the risk factors of whether these carriers will likely take delivery of their orders. We’ll do the same for Boeing.

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