Analysis-Airbus faces financial bill after end-year delivery crunch

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By Tim Hepher

PARIS (Reuters) – Airbus is counting the cost of last-minute financial concessions to airlines to overcome a spate of minor quality problems after scrambling to deliver a provisional 123 jets in December, industry sources said.

The end-year rush brings preliminary 2024 deliveries to 766 jets, up 4% from 2023, but this is subject to internal audits, meaning it could still be trimmed by one or two jets before final data is released on Thursday, the sources said.

Even so, the world’s largest planemaker is expected to declare victory after putting a floor of 750 on its guidance of “around 770” deliveries in a briefing to analysts in October.

Airbus declined comment. Reuters reported on Friday that Airbus had provisionally delivered over 765 jets.

Airbus has been under pressure to meet targets and deliver on promises to investors after a profit warning in July. But unions and some airlines have raised concerns that the push to speed up deliveries has come at the expense of quality problems.

Malaysia Airlines last month blamed the grounding of a brand new A330neo on quality issues. Airbus said it was supporting the airline alongside engine maker Rolls-Royce.

Hampered by weak supply chains, planemakers increasingly compensate airlines for cosmetic defects or pay for extra maintenance if they agree to take jets before deadlines, insiders say.

The potential stakes of such brinkmanship were exposed when Airbus agreed to pay $200,000 per day per plane over flaws in the painted surface of A350 jets, in certain conditions, if Qatar Airways agreed to take a jet on the last day of 2020.

The side-letter secured a much-needed end-year delivery but helped set the stage for a multibillion-dollar court battle before a settlement in 2023.

At one point during the dispute, Qatar had grounded 30 jets and sought to trigger the new clause over safety concerns, leaving Airbus with a ballooning exposure of $2.1 billion a year. Airbus and regulators consistently denied any safety risk.

CONCESSION LETTERS

Two years on, sources say such colossal financial stakes have evaporated but the practice of hard bargaining under the pressure of end-year delivery targets is becoming more routine.

They said Airbus had been forced to make financial pledges or offer other commercial incentives to get several December deliveries over the line. There are no suggestions that any glitches involved in end-year delivery negotiations have safety implications.

Contained in so-called “concession letters”, such delivery deals can involve tens of thousands of dollars, or in rarer cases up to one or two million for large jets, three people familiar with the Airbus handover process said.

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