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2010-08-09
LE BOURGET, France (AP) — International Lease Finance Corp., the world's largest airline leasing company, ordered 63 Boeing (BA) jets with a total list price of $8.8 billion, the company said Tuesday.
The additional orders for the Dreamliner makes Los Angeles-based ILFC the biggest customer for the first commercial jet made of light, sturdy, carbon-fiber composites instead of aluminum. It now has a total of 74 firm orders.
DAY 1: Airbus snags orders

Sales of the 787 have far outstripped those of rival Airbus' A350 after the European company — responding to customer complaints — decided to redesign its jet and pushed back its delivery date until 2013.
ILFC was the launch customer for the original A350, ordering 16 of the planes, and founder and CEO Stephen Udvar-Hazy was instrumental in the push to have the plane redesigned. He said Tuesday he would meet with Airbus co-Chief Executive Louis Gallois on Wednesday, but declined to elaborate.

Mike Bair, who heads the 787 program for Chicago-based Boeing, said Tuesday that the plane is on track for delivery to its first customer in May.
"We are where we need to be," Bair told reporters. "We have pockets that are behind," but the overall schedule for production remains steady, he said.
Bair said that the Dreamliner is now sold out until 2013. The ILFC orders announced Tuesday will begin delivery in 2013, carrying through until 2017. The earlier orders made by ILFC will start delivery in 2010.
The total Boeing order from ILFC, which included 10 next-generation 737s, was worth a total at list prices of $8.8 billion.
Planemakers often reserve big announcements for the air shows held on alternate years in Le Bourget and Farnborough, on the outskirts of London, to ensure maximum impact. The announcements usually include a mix of new orders, confirmed previous orders and plans for future orders.
Airbus remains out in front at Le Bourget, despite its troubles with the A350, after announcing a raft of orders on Monday, including a deal to supply Qatar Airlines with 80 A350s.
It added to those Tuesday with an order from Memphis-based leasing company Intrepid Aviation Group for 20 cargo versions of its A330-200 wide-bodied aircraft, worth $3.5 billion at list prices.
It also predicted that it will win at least 600 firm orders for its aircraft this year, including more than 20 for the double-decker A380.
"I can tell you with full confidence that Airbus is back," Gallois said at the show at Le Bourget, north of Paris.
Airbus sales chief John Leahy added that the planemaker expects to exceed 20 orders for the A380 this year, for which it currently has 163 firm orders.
Wiring and other technical problems have led to a two-year delay in delivery of the plane, which is expected to wipe out 4.8 billion euros ($6.2 billion) from the profit of parent company European Aeronautic Defense & Space over the next four years.
The company overhauled top executives and set in place a restructuring plan that includes cutting 10,000 jobs over four years.
Flanked by the new management team at Tuesday's news conference, Gallois was upbeat.
"We are in a process of turning the company around and this new management structure is, for you, the first tangible evidence that we are progressing," he said.
Leahy added that Airbus' total firm order book stands at 219, worth around $30 billion. The planemaker also has preliminary commitments for another 120 planes, worth around $15 billion, he said.
The Paris Air Show comes amid revived fortunes for the commercial airline industry. After two years in the red, the industry will make a profit of just over $5 billion this year, despite rising fuel costs, says the International Air Transport Association, whose 250 members claim to represent 94% of international air traffic.
Delta still deciding
Speaking from the show, Jim Whitehurst, chief operating officer of Delta Air Lines, said the Atlanta-based airline is still deciding between Boeing's new 787 Dreamliner and the Airbus A350.
"We're not placing an order," Whitehurst said. "It's in the assessment phase."
Whitehurst did not give specific numbers but said the order would be for "well over 100" new planes.
"Obviously, it would be a massive order when we make that decision," he said.
Whitehurst spoke with the Associated Press after The Wall Street Journal reported Whitehurst told the newspaper Delta may order as many as 125 of Boeing's 787 Dreamliners by the end of the year.
Whitehurst told the Journal the order is still being negotiated while Delta considers seat configurations and how much the planes would cost to operate and maintain.
The move to replace its fleet of 104 767s comes as Delta looks to expand its international service.
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2010-8-9 15:31:11
Airbus boasts $30 billion in deals

Struggling European jetmaker Airbus began righting itself Monday by announcing orders and pledges for more than $30 billion worth of new commercial jets as the huge Paris Air Show opened.
But the big sales announcements — including a $10 billion order from US Airways that had been in danger of going to rival Boeing (BA)— only keeps Airbus in the game. In the past two years, Boeing has blown past Airbus to regain the sales leader status it held for 30 years but lost in 2001.
Louis Gallois, CEO of France-based Airbus, called US Airways' order "an important endorsement of our products." US Airways operates the world's largest A320 fleet.
The US Airways order announced Monday was the first big announcement from the show, which alternates with England's Farnborough International Airshow every other year as the world's biggest display of commercial and defense aircraft. Manufacturers often announce big sales deals with airlines at the show.
Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways, the result of the 2005 merger between America West Airlines and the old US Airways, agreed to buy 60 A320 narrow-body jets, which it will use to replace older Boeing 737s that will be retired.

It also converted 20 orders for midsize A350s that had been in doubt into 22 orders for A350 XWBs, or "extra-wide body," Airbus' answer to Boeing's 787 Dreamliner. The retooled A350 XWB makes much more use of composite material to reduce weight. US Airways also ordered 12 A330s, an older wide-body design that the A350 XWB will replace.
Middle Eastern carrier Qatar Airlines ordered 80 A350 XWBs, three A380 jumbos and three A320 narrow-bodies. Qatar said the A350 XWB order is worth $16 billion. Emirates Airlines, the biggest customer so far for the A380, ordered eight more of the 550-passenger planes for about $2.5 billion. That raises its total A380 order to 55. The plane has been delayed for nearly two years by wiring assembly problems.
Airbus has continued to sell large numbers of its family of efficient narrow-body jets. But Boeing is dominating sales in the high-profit wide-body segment, thanks to its development of the hot-selling 787 Dreamliner and the widely reported problems with Airbus' A380 superjumbo and midsize A350.
Boeing went into the Paris Air Show with nearly 600 Dreamliner orders already on its books, vs. 13 for Airbus' A350 XWB.
Boeing, which had more modest expectations for sales at the show, announced the sale of 400 of its 737-900s to Indonesian carrier Lion Air, in a deal worth about $3 billion.
Contributing: Reuters, AP
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