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mostromarino

Guest
Le Bourget: Airbus firma contratti con tre compagnie asiatiche Notizie - Notizie compagnie aeree Tuesday 16 June 2009
airbus_a320_family.jpg
Airbus ha annunciato oggi all'Air Show di Le Bourget la firma di ordini fermi ed opzioni con tre vettori asiatici: Cebu Pacific, Vietnam Airlines ed AirAsia X. Cebu Pacific, vettore delle Filippine ha incrementato un precedente ordine per aeromobili A320 con un nuovo contratto per 5 aeromobili che porta a 15 il totale dei velivoli destinati alla compagnia. I nuovi aeromobili verranno consegnati a partire dal 2013. I primi dieci aeromobili saranno in consegna tra il 2010 e il 2013. Complessivamente il vettore ha ordinato 27 aeromobili della Famiglia A320, 12 dei quali sono già stati consegnati. Vietnam Airlines ha siglato un ordine fermo per 16 aeromobili A321 e firmato una lettera di intenti per l’acquisto di 2 ulteriori A350 XWB.


ilvolo.it
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Utile questo report di Jyske per chi segue la situazione di Bombardier... davvero completo... mi raccomando: una cosa sono i dati, un'altra i consigli per gli acquisti... usate i primi e per i secondi pensate con la vostra testa... :cool:
 

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azetaelle

investitore(s)qualificato
grazie mark, utilissimo! Al Bourget (che è successivo al report) però Bomb qualche ordine di aerei l'ha portato a casa, quindi perlomeno quell'aspetto è leggermente meglio di quanto indicato. Peraltro è effettivamente vero che da una decina di giorni i bond Bomb hanno rallentanto un po' la corsa ( anzi sono tornati un po' indietro).
 

Imark

Forumer storico
grazie mark, utilissimo! Al Bourget (che è successivo al report) però Bomb qualche ordine di aerei l'ha portato a casa, quindi perlomeno quell'aspetto è leggermente meglio di quanto indicato. Peraltro è effettivamente vero che da una decina di giorni i bond Bomb hanno rallentanto un po' la corsa ( anzi sono tornati un po' indietro).

Con le cancellazioni gli sono cresciuti gli aerei fermi sul piazzale ed in generale hanno bruciato abbondante cassa... :cool:

Gli ordinativi per gli aerei commerciali vanno bene (hanno in effetti raccolto ancora ordini per altri 8 Q400, con opzione per ulteriori 8: http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2009/06/16/ap6550094.html), e anche sui business jet soffrono leggermente meno della concorrenza, però ancora un paio di trimestri così ...

I bond mi sembrano assestati per ora attorno a 86-87 il 7,25%....il VRN più corto non mi ricordo, è un po' che non lo guardo... ;)
 

azetaelle

investitore(s)qualificato
si, al momento 85-87 il 7.25% OTC, l'altro non lo seguo. Ma rispetto ad esempio a una fiat 2013 che quota appena di più e ha una cedola del 6.255 tu come la vedi? E' dura trovare dei bilanci (e delle previsioni di bilancio) rosei in questo periodo...a meno che non siano tarocchi :lol:
 

Imark

Forumer storico
si, al momento 85-87 il 7.25% OTC, l'altro non lo seguo. Ma rispetto ad esempio a una fiat 2013 che quota appena di più e ha una cedola del 6.255 tu come la vedi? E' dura trovare dei bilanci (e delle previsioni di bilancio) rosei in questo periodo...a meno che non siano tarocchi :lol:

Mah, Bombardier dovrebbe impiegare più tempo ad uscire dalla crisi (della quale non sappiamo quanto durerà) ma ci entra disponendo di liquidità più consistente rispetto a Fiat e scadenze debitorie meglio distribuite e più lontane ... se riesce a contenere la sovracapacità produttiva nel settore dei business jets e a non accrescere l'inventario...

Forse non è il momento giusto per nessuna delle due... se non in un'ottica molto speculativa
 

mostromarino

Guest
Ordine record per Etihad Airways
14 miliardi di dollari per l’acquisto dei motori degli aeromobili

I motori dei nuovi Airbus e Boeing ordinati da Etihad Airways al Farnborough International Airshow 2008 saranno forniti da GE Aviation, Rolls-Royce, Engine Alliance e International Aero Engines. L’accordo di Farnborough include l’ordine fermo di 100 velivoli e l’opzione e il diritto d’acquisto su ulteriori 105 aeromobili, che verranno consegnati tra il 2011 e il 2020. Rolls-Royce e GE Aviation forniranno i motori per i nuovi Airbus A350 e Boeing 777. L’ordine per i 239 motori, di cui 19 di scorta, vale 7 miliardi di dollari, compresi i contratti di manutenzione. Includendo le opzioni e i diritti d’acquisto, il numero totale di motori arriverà a 469 pezzi, con un prezzo di listino del valore di 14 miliardi di dollari, inclusi i contratti di manutenzione.

guidaviaggi.it
 

mostromarino

Guest
18/06/2009 10.57
Un bond da 575 milioni di euro da Air France-Klm




Air France-Klm ha lanciato un'obbligazione convertibile di 575 milioni di euro. L'operazione è mirata principalmente a finanziare l'arrivo di nuovi aerei per la flotta. "L'importo - spiega la compagnia in una nota - potrebbe essere aumentato a 661 milioni di euro se venisse esercitata totalmente l'opzione di estensione". Il ministero dell'Economia francese prenderà parte all'emissione mantenendo una quota del 15,7%


ttg

http://www.ttgitalia.com/pagine/new...Air_France_Klm.aspx?id_news=249843&idx=0&L=IT





e

http://corporate.airfrance.com/en/key-figures/financial-year-2007-2008/index.html
 
Ultima modifica di un moderatore:

Imark

Forumer storico
Il mercato dei nuovi ordini con un consuntivo ad oggi per Airbus e Boeing. Gli ordini acquisiti surante l'Air show di Parigi hanno restituito a Airbus un filo di ottimismo circa il fatto che il peggio possa essere passato, sebbene - ammesso che ciò torni vero - il costruttore europeo ipotizza che ci vorrà tempo prima di una ripresa effettiva degli ordinativi...

Airbus sees bottom of industry slump

Beating Boeing for orders, Airbus says Paris Air Show shows aviation slump may be past worst

  • By Emma Vandore, AP Business Writer
  • On Friday June 19, 2009, 12:40 pm EDT
LE BOURGET, France (AP) -- Airbus CEO Tom Enders was in high spirits on Friday, saying the unexpected crop of orders won at the Paris Air Show shows the heart of the aviation industry is still beating despite the recession.

Unlike archrival Boeing Co. -- which managed a single order for two planes worth a paltry $153 million -- the European planemaker chalked up firm orders for 58 planes worth $6.4 billion over five days, mostly from Asian and budget airlines.

Including commitments -- when customers make a deposit but the sale is not legally binding -- Airbus signed deals worth $12.9 billion for 127 planes.

Enders told The Associated Press that Airbus "didn't expect" such a score.
"I think it's a good sign for the entire industry," he said in a interview. "It's a good sign that aviation is not collapsing, that there is not doom and gloom all over."

Not collapsing perhaps, but not brimming with confidence either.
The International Air Transport Association estimates the world's airlines will collectively lose $9 billion this year and face a slow recovery as the economic crisis saps air travel and cargo demand.

Leahy said the air show orders suggest "we are bouncing along the bottom" -- although "I don't think this necessarily means that we are in full recovery mode yet."

He said Airbus' target of capturing 300 orders this year "didn't look too accurate a couple of weeks ago" but is now "perhaps achievable."
Boeing tried to shrug off Airbus' better success with orders during the week, saying the company doesn't save up orders to announce at air shows.

But it's year-to-date tally also tails Airbus.

Boeing's orders on June 16 totaled 76 planes this year, but with 66 cancellations its net score falls to just 10.

Before the show, Airbus had 11 net orders and 32 gross orders. It's new net score is 69.

Diogenis Papiomytis, an aerospace analyst with Frost & Sullivan in London, attributed Airbus' performance to its success selling its cash cow, the single-aisle A320, to regional carriers such as Hungary's Wizz Air and Philippines low-cost airline Cebu Pacific.

Leahy said that despite the economic climate "pricing is essentially the same" as last year, denying that he is offering steep discounts to lure cash strapped airlines.

On the fifth day of the show, which opened to the public on Friday and runs through Sunday, Airbus announced another two deals, both memorandums of understanding.

Airbus said Indian airline Paramount Airways agreed to buy 10 A321 planes, each worth $90.3 million at list prices. The deal also includes an option for an additional 10 jets.

And in a last minute deal, inked as Leahy was leaving the show, Turkish Airlines agreed to acquire seven widebody A330s, including five A330-300s and two A330-200s, worth a total of $1.3 billion at list prices.

Still, far fewer deals have been signed than years past, as airlines and governments strapped for cash and credit at the show admired the high-tech hardware but hide their checkbooks.

At the Farnborough International Airshow last year, which alternates with Paris as aviation's biggest gathering, Airbus racked up 247 plane orders worth $38.7 billion at catalog prices, and Boeing landed 197 plane orders worth $23.1 billion.

Behind the wheeling and dealing, the air show was also overshadowed by the tragedy of Air France Flight 447. The French airline said Friday it would give about euro17,500 ($24,000) as an advance to the families of the victims of the flight which never made it to its intended destination of Paris.

Remains of some of the 228 dead, and hundreds of pieces of wreckage reclaimed from the sea off Brazil are helping experts build a picture of what happened to the A330.

Leahy downplayed the significance of the sale of seven A330s, saying an A330 is taking off somewhere in the world every 60 seconds.
"We've had an incident and we have to get to the bottom of it but I think the world's airlines think this is a very flyable airline, a very safe airplane, a very good airplane."

France's Dassault SA also moved forward with talks over the sale of 60 Rafale fighter jets to the United Arab Emirates. In a statement, French president Nicolas Sarkozy's office said he "welcomed the progress" made on the possible sale, announced by UAE officials at the air show Friday.

Sarkozy is pushing a deal for the UAE to purchase twin-engined Rafale fighter jets. Last month France opened its first military base in the Gulf, outside the United Arab Emirates' capital, Abu Dhabi.

AP Business writer Greg Keller contributed to this report from Paris
 

The Beast

Rating? No grazie!
une 19 (Bloomberg) -- The biggest threat to the global airline industry isn’t the swine flu outbreak, according to AirAsia Bhd.’s Tony Fernandes. “We’ve been through SARS, bird flu, tsunami, you name it,” Fernandes, the founder and chief executive officer of Southeast Asia’s biggest discount carrier, said at the Paris Air Show this week. “The only swine now are bankers.” :D
Carriers from Air France-KLM Group to AirAsia, already coping with a slump in travel, also have to deal with banks that are unwilling to finance aircraft purchases. Airlines have to come up with money to pay for jets ordered years ago or face penalties for cancellations. In 2010, the funding shortfall may reach $36 billion, or as much as 60 percent of the spending on larger aircraft, said Nick Cunningham, an analyst at Evolution Securities in London.
“Debt is the critical component of any strategy right now,” said Steve Rimmer, CEO of Guggenheim Aviation Partners LLC in Issaquah, Washington. Guggenheim has 56 aircraft either owned or under contract with a value of $2.5 billion and makes money by leasing them to carriers in return for regular payments. “We, like everyone, are chasing debt.”
Airlines, which posted a total of $10.4 billion in losses in 2008 according to the International Air Transport Association, are eliminating jobs, cutting routes and grounding planes to survive a slowdown.
AirAsia X, Air France
AirAsia X, the long-haul affiliate of Malaysia-based AirAsia Bhd., is seeking short-term financing from more banks and paying higher borrowing costs, said Azran Osman Rani, the CEO of AirAsia X. The airline announced an order the Paris show for 10 Airbus SAS A350s, valued at $2.4 billion at list prices, as regional low-cost traffic grows in defiance of the global aviation slump.
AirAsia said its borrowing costs have climbed less than 100 basis points from a year earlier. Air France-KLM, Europe’s biggest airline, said the cost of financing aircraft purchases has increased by about 220 basis points from a year ago. A basis point is a hundredth of a percentage point.
“A year ago, when you wanted to finance an aircraft you’d have a queue through your doors,” Air France CEO Pierre-Henri Gourgeon said in an interview last month. “Once when we asked for three aircraft to be financed we got positive answers from 12 banks. Now it’s the reverse. It takes a lot of time.”
Paris-based Air France has turned to BOC Aviation, Asia’s biggest aircraft lessor and a unit of Bank of China Ltd., to help finance jetliner purchases. Air France’s traditional lenders include Calyon Securities and Natixis Transport Finance, a unit of Natixis SA, both based in Paris. Bertrand Hugonet, a Calyon spokesman, and Victoria Eideliman, a Natixis spokeswoman, didn’t immediately return calls and messages seeking comment.
State Backing
BOC Aviation said on June 4 that it will borrow as much as $560 million to help finance aircraft purchases. The Singapore- based company has acquired 40 planes since December and predicts it will have invested $10 billion in jets by 2012, more than doubling the current fleet size of 96.
The backing of Bank of China, the nation’s third-largest bank by assets, gives BOC an advantage amid financial woes at General Electric Co., whose Gecas aircraft-leasing unit has the biggest fleet in the world, and American International Group Inc., the owner of International Lease Finance Corp., said Alasdair Whyte, the publisher of Airfinance Journal.
“BOC has been one of the few lessors who’ve had a parent willing to support them,” Whyte said. “There’s a complete shortage on the lessor scene for sale-leasebacks.”
‘Best Time to Invest’
GE says it’s coming back into the market now that capital markets have eased.
“We, in recent months, have seen our funding costs decline significantly,” said Norm Liu, who becomes Gecas’s chief starting next month. “It’s the down cycle, and that’s typically the best time to invest.”
That’s what John Slattery is doing. The former head of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc’s RBS Aviation Capital founded GreenStone Aviation in Dublin last week, after amassing $100 million from Jefferies Capital Partners, to do only jetliner sale-leaseback transactions. Slattery said he wants to attract as much as $500 million in private equity funding by the end of next year.
The difference between the value of an aircraft during an economic boom and a recession is typically 12 percent to 15 percent, Slattery said. In the current cycle, worsened by the credit crunch, the gap could be as much as 20 percent, he said. In addition to receiving monthly leasing payments, aircraft lessors retain the planes for possible sale later.
Loan Guarantees
Sky Holding Company, a San Francisco-based aircraft leasing and management company founded in 2007 by former Pegasus Aviation executives, has a fleet of about 100 aircraft and said it’s now seeking sale-leaseback transactions.
The company is “ready to go,” CEO Rich Wiley said, declining to comment on the amount of private-equity financing he’s lined up. “Our job is to bring a new source of capital to the airlines.”
As airlines wait for the private money to return, governments have increased the guarantees they offer on bank loans. European export credit agencies will back about half of Airbus deliveries next year, up from 40 percent in 2009, Airbus Chief Operating Officer John Leahy said.
The U.S. Export-Import Bank has also said it may boost guarantees on bank loans for Boeing Co. aircraft this year by more than 70 percent and may even lend money directly. The organization is set to put up $9 billion in loan guarantees for planes from Boeing and smaller aircraft makers, up from $5.2 billion in 2008, John McAdams, the bank’s chief operating officer, said April 15.
Not Charity
Airplane makers jump in only as a last resort when their customers can’t get financing elsewhere.
“We’re not a bank, not a charity organization,” Airbus CEO Tom Enders said last week during the biennial show, the largest for the aerospace industry. “We have to use funds on a very selected basis.”
This year, Airbus is providing 1 billion euros ($1.4 billion) to help customers pay for their planes and will raise the figure next year, Enders said. Walt Skowronski, president of Boeing Capital Corp., says the funding gap has narrowed amid “gradual improvement” and the Chicago-based planemaker may not have to provide the $1 billion in direct financing it’s prepared to give.
Boeing is considering “whatever financial support we think is appropriate” for UAL Corp.’s United Airlines, said Boeing Commercial Airplanes President Scott Carson. The unprofitable carrier is considering taking advantage of the economic slowdown to seek discounts for as many as 150 planes to replace older models in its fleet.
“Certainly the area of financing is not something that’s unknown to the manufacturers,” United Chief Financial Officer Kathryn Mikells said in an interview. “And that’ll be part of the conversation we’ll be having.
 

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