Bombardier Mulls Leaving Commercial Venture With Airbus -- WSJ
2020年1月17日 - 5:02PM
Dow Jones News
By Jacquie McNish
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (January 17, 2020).
Bombardier Inc. said it may exit a joint venture with Airbus SE
to build commercial jets because rising production costs threaten
future returns on its investment.
Shares of the Canadian plane and train maker fell more than 32%
to close at C$1.21 ($0.93) on the Toronto Stock Exchange, the
lowest since early 2016. The company also lowered its guidance for
the fourth quarter.
Bombardier said the need for additional cash to finance the
production of the commercial jets in Mobile, Ala., may undermine
any prospect of future profits, potentially forcing Bombardier to
write down the value of the Airbus venture.
Bombardier agreed to give control of its CSeries jets to Airbus
in 2017 for no money upfront to rescue it. The new jet series had
financially crippled the Montreal company after years of delays and
billions of dollars of investment. Airbus renamed the single-aisle
aircraft the A220.
An Airbus spokesman said it "remains committed to the success of
the A220 program and will continue to fund the program on its way
to break-even."
The latest financial projections for the program have pushed
back its timeline for breaking even and requires more investment to
boost production, Bombardier said. Airbus delivered 48 of the
aircraft to customers last year, leaving its backlog at 495
aircraft as of Dec. 31. Airbus's strategy since taking control of
the venture has been to drum up more orders for the jet and scale
up production in order to negotiate better rates with
suppliers.
Bombardier, which owns about a third of the venture, agreed to
inject up to $225 million of cash into the partnership in 2018 and
a maximum of $350 million in 2019. Bombardier may be on the hook
for additional funds in future years if cash shortfalls
continue.
The Canadian company has limited financial resources to absorb
additional costs after a number of production problems with major
commuter train orders delayed deliveries in recent years.
Bombardier said Thursday that it expects to report negative free
cash flow of $1.2 billion for 2019 and that results for the fourth
quarter would fall short of expectations.
--Benjamin Katz contributed to this article.
Write to Jacquie McNish at Jacquie.McNish@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 17, 2020 02:47 ET (07:47 GMT)
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