An Air China Boeing 777 crosses a bridge at the Beijing International airpor. Teal Group forecasts demand for big jets will fall. AFP / STR
An Air China Boeing 777 crosses a bridge at the Beijing International airpor. Teal Group forecasts demand for big jets will fall. AFP / STR
An Air China Boeing 777 crosses a bridge at the Beijing International airpor. Teal Group forecasts demand for big jets will fall. AFP / STR
An Air China Boeing 777 crosses a bridge at the Beijing International airpor. Teal Group forecasts demand for big jets will fall. AFP / STR

Boeing and Airbus jetliner demand to fall but military aircraft to cushion blow


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Demand for jetliners made by Boeing and Airbus is in decline but no big bust for the industry lies ahead, a leading analyst said, noting that military aircraft sales should rise.

“The great boom is over,” Richard Aboulafia, analyst at Teal Group, said at an industry conference near Seattle. “But I don’t see a bust cycle” unless there’s a trade war, he added.

An industry slowdown has implications for investors and suppliers trying to anticipate the flow of orders as a guide the capacity they will need to meet changes in aircraft production.

Multi-year backlogs of jetliner orders at both big plane makers will cushion the downturn, along with rising sales of military aircraft, especially spy and fighter planes as defence spending is expected to rise at least initially under the US president Donald Trump, he added.

Higher interest rates and a possible border tax on imports could hurt the US aerospace industry, however, by causing the dollar to strengthen further, Mr Aboulafia said. Also, the risk of a major trade dispute is as high as at any time since Second World War, he added.

A US trade dispute with China would likely benefit the European plane maker Airbus since China could easily retaliate against the US by curbing orders of Boeing planes, Aboulafia said.

In the commercial aircraft market, a planned boost in output of single-aisle Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 aircraft is likely to continue. The two plane makers plan to increase output by more than 30 per cent through the end of the decade and need the income from these high-volume assembly lines to hit their financial targets.

“This is the part of the market where you’re going to see continued growth,” he said.

But twin-aisle aircraft face a much tougher future because there are more models competing while demand is declining. “Everyone wants too much from this market,” he said, adding that orders are “plateauing”.

* Reuters

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