Resurgent Boeing 737 MAX could trigger jet surplus, analyst
warns
* Market faces potential surplus of 1,000 jets next year
-Cirium
* Air Lease CEO less worried about surge in MAX
deliveries
* Boeing aims to deliver record-tying 70 planes/month when MAX
returns
By Tim Hepher and Anshuman
Daga
HONG KONG, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Airlines that have been
forced to rejig operations due to the grounding of the 737 MAX could face a
markedly different problem when Boeing Co's best-selling jet is finally cleared
to re-enter service: a gradual switch to concerns about oversupply, a leading
analyst warned on Monday.
The Chicago-based planemaker has continued to
produce the jet since it was grounded in March in the wake of two fatal
accidents, and is expected to speed deliveries by 40% to 70 units a month when
its factory doors reopen, in a bid to start clearing the backlog.
Rob
Morris, global head of consultancy at UK-based Ascend by Cirium, said the
combination of any rapid rebound in deliveries, economic worries and an
accumulation of market pressures dating back before the crashes could make it
hard to absorb the jets.
"Next year is the challenge. When the dam breaks
and the MAX starts to flow, there are going to be a lot of aircraft," Morris
told a briefing ahead of the Airline Economics Growth Frontiers conference late
on Monday.
"There could potentially be as many as 1,000 surplus aircraft
next year."
Until now, most concern has focused on whether regulators
would permit an orderly return to service by avoiding gaps in approvals between
different countries.
But Morris, who has argued a long up-cycle in
aviation is nearly over, said there were also risks in opening floodgates too
quickly, overwhelming fragile growth in travel demand.
Still, he and
other delegates at back-to-back aviation finance gatherings in Hong Kong agreed
it would take Boeing 18 months or longer to deliver all the stranded
aircraft.
The operation will be one of the industry's biggest ever
logistical challenges and any glitches or delays could act as a further brake on
supply.
"Getting all those aircraft, that are currently parked, off the
ground could take two years," John Plueger, chief executive of Air Lease Corp,
said in an interview last week, adding he did not see fundamental changes as a
result of the MAX's return.
"It is not as if all these MAX could be
delivered over a one-, two- or three-month period ... so it is not an open
floodgate and 350 planes all coming onto the market tomorrow," he told Reuters
on the sidelines of the Airfinance Journal Asia Pacific
conference.
Boeing has said it aims to return the 737 MAX to service in
the United States by the end of 2019 after making software changes in the wake
of the crashes, which killed 346 people.
Europe's top regulator said on
Monday the airliner is likely to return to service in Europe during the first
quarter of 2020.
Analysts say more than 300 MAX aircraft have been
produced since March when commercial flights were banned and deliveries frozen.
This could rise to 400 by the time the plane returns to service.
Boeing
is additionally expected to deliver close to 600 jets straight from the
production line next year. It has indicated it plans to deliver up to 70 jets a
month, equal to a previous record. Of this, analysts say around 20 are
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