Confident Airbus juggles jet output and pays record
dividend
MUNICH, Feb 27 (Reuters) - Airbus Group defied
warnings of a slowdown in the jetliner market with a steep production boost for
its top-selling A320 and announced its biggest ever dividend.
The firm's
confidence about demand and a switch to the new A320 model lifted its shares and
came despite a fresh charge of 551 million euros due to delays to the A400M
military transporter.
The world's second-largest aerospace group after
Boeing said it would increase production of the A320 jet family to a record 50 a
month in early 2017.
Both the scale and accelerated timing for the move,
confirmed details reported by Reuters earlier this week..
The confidence
shown by the production boost overrode concerns about a simultaneous "temporary"
drop in production of the wide-body A330 jet, which is enduring slow sales ahead
of its own revamp in 2017.
Both models are seen as cash cows for the
company.
The A330 production rate was cut to six a month from the first
quarter of 2016, having already been cut to nine a month from the fourth quarter
of this year.
"Airbus has bitten the bullet on the A330," said Edison
Investment Research analyst Sash Tusa, adding that the move was widely
expected.
The hike from 42 A320s a month to 50 by the first quarter of
2017, closely chasing Boeing's plans for its 737, "could to an extent offset the
A330 effect in that year," he said in a note.
Airbus Group Chief
Executive Tom Enders dismissed recent market concerns that the commercial
aerospace cycle has peaked.
"We have heard that last year and the year
before," he told a news conference. "We don't see it as long as the world
doesn't come tumbling down. The demand is clearly there."
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