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Friday, April 26, 2024

American orders 460 new planes from Boeing, Airbus

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FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — American Airlines is buying at least 460

new planes over the next five years in what it calls the biggest

airline order in history. And in a victory for Airbus, it’s

splitting the work between the European plane maker and

Boeing.

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American said Wednesday it will buy 260 planes from Airbus and 200

from Boeing Co. It expects the new, better-mileage planes to

provide much-needed savings on fuel costs. American’s current fleet

is among the least fuel-efficient in the industry.

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The jets carry a sticker price of more than $38 billion, although

big airlines routinely get discounts. And American might have

played one aircraft maker off the other to get a better

deal.

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AMR Corp., American’s parent, also announced that it plans to spin

off its American Eagle regional-flying subsidiary as a separate

company.

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The twin announcements overshadowed the news that AMR lost $286

million in the second quarter, as rising fuel prices wiped out an

increase in revenue. The loss equaled 85 cents per share. Wall

Street was expecting a loss of 77 cents, according to FactSet.

Still, AMR shares rose almost 4 percent to $5.11 in premarket

trading.

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In recent weeks, the airline industry was riveted by the drama of

Airbus and Boeing making competing bids to overhaul American’s

fleet. American currently flies and all-Boeing fleet.

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In discussions that lasted long into Tuesday night, American

decided to buy 200 planes from Boeing’s 737 family of workhorse

single-aisle planes, with deliveries starting in 2013. Half are

expected to be equipped with updated, more fuel-efficient engines.

The airline said it will take options for another 100

737s.

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American also will buy 260 planes from Airbus’s A320 series with

deliveries starting in 2013, and take options and purchase rights

for 365 more. Starting in 2017, American will get the first of 130

copies of a new Airbus plane called the A320neo – for new engine

option – which Airbus claims will be 15 percent more fuel-efficient

than current jets when it goes into service in late

2015.

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American will also take options and purchase rights for up to 465

additional planes through 2025, mostly from Airbus.

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American has used Airbus planes before, although only a few dozen

of them – it grounded the last one in 2009. When American

intensified plans to overhaul the fleet a couple of years ago,

Chicago-based Boeing was seen as the favorite.

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In recent months, Boeing has publicly debated whether to put a new

engine on the 737 or take the more radical and costly but perhaps

rewarding move of developing an entirely new plane. Airbus,

meanwhile, was forging ahead by taking hundreds of orders for the

A320neo.

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Airbus CEO Tom Enders called American’s decision “a strong vote of

confidence in our product in the important North American market.”

Airbus is part of European Aeronautics Defence & Space

Co.

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Airbus now has almost 1,200 firm orders and commitments for the

A320neo, and has announced plans to increase production to 42 per

month in 2013.

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With American paying more than $3 a gallon for fuel, the search for

better mileage helped drive the company’s plane-buying

decision.

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American’s fleet of more than 600 planes averages about 15 years in

age, among the oldest in the U.S. airline industry. One-third of

the fleet consists of fuel-guzzling McDonnell Douglas MD-80

aircraft.

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“The plan was to replace those MD-80s over seven or eight years,”

said Mike Boyd, an aviation consultant who studied American’s fleet

for its pilots’ union. “Well, American can’t wait that long, not

with fuel over $3 a gallon. They’ve got to unload those

MD-80s.”

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In a statement, AMR Chairman and CEO Gerard Arpey said American

“expects to have the youngest and most fuel-efficient fleet among

our peers in the U.S. industry within five years.”

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The need for fuel-efficiency was evident in AMR’s second-quarter

results. Revenue rose to $6.11 billion from $5.67 billion a year

ago, thanks to higher fares and fees. But American’s fuel bill rose

33 percent – an increase of $547 million from the same period last

year, outstripping the gain in revenue. Fuel has overtaken labor as

the airline’s biggest expense.

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American said it got $13 billion in financing commitments from

Airbus and Boeing to help buy the new planes. But AMR already has

$17.1 billion in debt, and analysts wonder about the wisdom of

borrowing more while the company is still posting huge

losses.

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“We understand that American’s fleet (and brand) are tired,” UBS

analyst Kevin Crissey said in a note to clients, “but this

announcement represents a ton of new capital being put into a

failing business model.”

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