Bombardier Nears End to Jet Venture -- WSJ
2020年2月8日 - 5:02PM
Dow Jones News
By Jacquie McNish and Benjamin Katz
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 (February 8, 2020).
Airbus SE is in advanced talks to acquire Bombardier Inc.'s
remaining stake in a commercial jet family that the Canadian
company once said would transform it into a major global aviation
player, people familiar with the matter said.
An agreement for the sale of Bombardier's 34% stake in the two
companies' joint A220 commercial jet program could be reached as
early as next week, ahead of both companies' earnings reports, the
people said.
The Quebec government, which holds a 16% stake in the venture,
is expected to hold its stake.
Financial terms of the planned sale couldn't be learned. While
talks are in final stages, they could still fall apart or the
contours of the potential deal could change.
The Montreal plane and train maker has been scrambling to reduce
roughly $9 billion of long-term debt, some of which comes due next
year. The company is seeking to pare its debts by selling the stake
in the Airbus partnership and one of its two other core divisions,
people familiar with the matter have said
Bombardier began talks several weeks ago to sell its
business-jet division to Textron Inc., The Wall Street Journal
reported Tuesday. Those discussions came after negotiations to sell
its train unit to France's Alstom SA slowed amid concerns about
rising costs and delivery delays at the division.
Much of Bombardier's debt was taken on to finance the company's
ambitious strategy to enter the commercial airline market. It
formally launched the CSeries in 2008 with the goal of developing
an aircraft that could compete with Boeing's 737 MAX and the Airbus
A320neo narrow-body commercial planes.
While the jet was lauded by airline customers, sales were
disappointing because of concerns about the sustainability of a
program that had severely weakened Bombardier's financial condition
after years of delays and soaring costs.
Airbus took a 50.01% stake in the CSeries program in July 2018.
It paid virtually no cash for the stake but committed to throwing
its global marketing heft behind the jet.
Bombardier, meanwhile, committed to covering the program's
losses over a set period.
Bombardier said last month that it had started a strategic
review of its stake in the Airbus partnership because of the rising
losses.
Under the terms of the proposed new stake sale, Airbus would
absorb the $350 million in losses that Bombardier was required to
cover this year, according to the people familiar with the
matter.
After the talks with Textron were reported by the Journal,
Bombardier came under political criticism in Quebec for putting up
for sale its business-jet division, which received a $1 billion
lifeline from the province in 2015.
Bombardier's jet business anchors a thriving aerospace sector in
Quebec, employing more than 40,000 workers.
Write to Jacquie McNish at Jacquie.McNish@wsj.com and Benjamin
Katz at ben.katz@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 08, 2020 02:47 ET (07:47 GMT)
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