Bombardier CSeries: a che punto siamo?


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Stormy Skies: Bombardier Flies a Risky Flight Path

GlobeandMail.com (Toronto newspaper)
Published/posted: 02.06.15

MONTREAL - Bombardier Inc. employees have a phrase for the kind of personal feel-it-in-your-gut commitment to the company that goes well beyond normal work duty. They call it “avoir le sang jaune.”

Literally, it means to have yellow blood, a reference to the colour of the first snowmobiles cranked out by company founder Joseph Armand Bombardier in Quebec’s Eastern Townships. There’s a book by that name, which chronicles the effort of Mr. Bombardier’s son-in-law, Laurent Beaudoin, to put the manufacturer on a fast-growth trajectory from bit regional player to iconic Canadian multinational.

Today, it’s Mr. Beaudoin’s son Pierre steering Bombardier as chief executive. And the 52 year-old’s own yellow, cold-blooded resolve is being tested as never before.

The Montreal-based transportation giant is facing one of the biggest challenges in its 73-year history. Under attack by global competitors and slowed by its own missteps, Bombardier is being forced to re-engineer its business and fend off a brewing cash crunch.

The company has already discontinued a key business jet under development as it focuses resources and cash on priority programs such as the C Series airliner. But with increased focus comes increased risk, and investors see plenty. Bombardier’s shares have plunged to levels seen two decades ago, and confidence in the company’s prospects for a quick turnaround is slipping.

“There’s just too many question marks in my mind to feel comfortable” adding to our position, said Manash Goswami, a fund manager for First Asset in Toronto, which holds Bombardier shares.

“There’s just so much uncertainty.”

Pierre Beaudoin insists the company will overcome its current struggles.

“We built the company, whether it’s my grandfather, my father or myself … by setting bold targets and going after big projects,” he told The Globe and Mail from Davos recently. “In doing this you get some ups and downs. And I feel that, this time, we’re coming very close to the delivery of very important projects for Bombardier.”

But while Mr. Beaudoin was in Switzerland, back in Toronto Bombardier’s share price was finding a bottom near $2.50 after a stunning 40-per-cent drop over three days. The company had warned that already-thin profit margins for both its aerospace and train units in 2014 would be less than previously expected, and said cash flow from operations for aerospace would be $800-million, some $400-million less than the lower end of previous guidance. Investors saw that the company could come dangerously close to running out of money without fresh funds.

Bombardier also announced it would suspend the development of its new Learjet 85 business aircraft and lay off 1,000 workers. Observers took that as a sign Bombardier needed to conserve cash for its other two major jet development projects: The commercial passenger jet C Series and the new Global 7000/8000 business aircraft.

At the heart of the plane and train maker’s shocking financial revision was a big mismatch between orders for new aircraft and actual deliveries. Winning fewer orders could erode Bombardier’s cash position further and affect its borrowing agreements, just as it pushes to finish tests on the C Series and get it into service by the end of 2015.

The sharply lower financial projections stunned followers. “Management has lost all credibility,” said Veritas Investment Research analyst Anthony Scilipoti. “The lowered 2014 guidance suggests that management does not have a clear handle on its existing business,” he said, adding that he believes the company’s dividend is at risk.

The C Series program was problematic from the start. After restarting development in 2007 following a dearth of orders, Bombardier subsequently pushed back the entry into service again two more times, citing supplier issues. That, in turn, resulted in at least one cancelled order.

When an engine on one of four C Series test aircraft caught fire during a ground test, the program suffered an embarrassing and high-profile setback. Although a minor fault in the lubrication system was the cause, Bombardier didn’t have the plane available to show off at the prominent Farnborough air show in England.

Profit misses and program delays didn’t sit well in the chief executive suite. Mr. Beaudoin decided he needed a better window into the plane business, one inside source said.

The result was a massive reorganization that saw the dismantling of the aerospace umbrella group this past fall. Some 2,000 white-collar workers lost their jobs and the three senior executives leading the business aircraft, commercial aircraft and aerostructures units now report directly to Mr. Beaudoin.

“He wanted to be able to see the bad news as well as the good news and to have that visibility,” said the source, adding that the new structure has also raised the accountability of the business unit leaders. Bombardier used to have senior-level meetings with dozens of people present. Now, attendance is restricted to a select group of the most pertinent.

Corporate jet orders stall

The key challenge now facing Bombardier executives is a slow pace of aircraft sales.

Altacorp Capital analyst Chris Murray estimates Bombardier received new orders for barely 14 Challenger and Global corporate aircraft in the fourth quarter of 2014 while shipping out about 60 of the same models for a book-to-bill ratio of roughly 0.25. Because Bombardier typically books cash advances when planes are ordered, fewer orders means fewer advances.

“Basically they need more order intake, with higher levels of advances up front,” Mr. Murray said. “Because that builds up their cash balance.”

The analyst predicts Bombardier’s business jet unit will end 2014 with a book-to-bill of barely 0.6 per cent, meaning it will tally orders for barely six new jets for every 10 it ships. That’s the weakest order intake in at least three years.

Do the slow sales signal tough times for corporate jet sales? Not exactly. General Dynamics, the U.S. military contractor that owns Bombardier rival Gulfstream, said its aerospace business chalked up more jet orders during its last quarter than any quarter in more than three years. Cessna maker Textron also has a positive outlook for business.

As for Bombardier, it held an industry-leading position as recently as 2013, and had a recent business jet backlog that stretched as long as 33 months for the mid-sized Challenger jets. But until it gets its next-generation large-cabin Globals to market, it risks losing ground to rivals.

The problem, notes aerospace consultancy Teal Group, is that Gulfstream largely stole the show in recent years with its new G650 jet. From 2005, when it first unveiled plans to build the jet publicly, to 2014, Gulfstream increased its corporate aircraft market share to 39 per cent from 25 per cent.

Bombardier was late to respond with its own new high-end model, the Global 7000/8000, Teal noted. That plane is scheduled to enter into service next year but still hasn’t flown. Bombardier “gave five years, and probably more, to Gulfstream,” said Teal’s vice-president of analysis Richard Aboulafia.

Interviews with people arranging the corporate jet buying and selling, however, paint a more nuanced picture.

It’s not necessarily that the $70-million Gulfstream G650 is such a superior plane to anything Bombardier has. Plane broker Edward Dahlberg with Emerald Aviation in Manassas, Va., said that on early G650 units, the plane’s oven would automatically turn on when the aircraft was powered up. “Everything about the inside” of Bombardier’s top-priced Global 6000 is better than the Gulfstream, he said.

But Gulfstreams have the advantage on range. Both the G550 and G650 can fly further than current in-service Bombardier planes. Savannah, Ga.-based Gulfstream is also perceived to offer superior post-sale support than Bombardier, Mr. Dahlberg said.

Credit stress

With two critical airplane development programs under way at once and a third on ice, investors are now zeroing in on Bombardier’s cash position.

Management insists that with access to $3.8-billion in liquidity (including $2.4-billion in cash and $1.4-billion via separate credit agreements), the company has enough liquidity to fund operations and current aircraft development programs.

Others aren’t so sure, and expect the company will have to raise money at some point during the year. Among the various financial covenants under its credit agreements, the company must maintain minimum liquidity of $827-million at its train unit and a minimum $500-million at its aerospace unit at the end of each quarter.

Bombardier has had success raising bond debt in the past. But whether it can do so now on the same terms is unclear. Creditors seem shaken by the recent turn of events at the company, bidding up yields on one tranche of bonds maturing in 2018 to 7 per cent from 4 per cent. Bombardier had some $7.6-billion in long-term debt at the end of September, 2014. Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s Investors Service rate the company’s debt as junk.

Turan Quettawala of Bank of Nova Scotia sums up the worst-case scenario. “The numbers are big and scary” as it relates to Bombardier’s liquidity, Mr. Quettawala said in a recent note. He estimates the company will need about $1-billion in financing over the next 12 to 15 months to plug the hole from negative free cash flow in 2014 and 2015. The company also has $750-million in debt maturing in January, 2016.

“The key here is that Bombardier will need to access the capital markets over the next year or so,” the analyst said. “While debt will obviously be the first choice, the opportunity is getting slimmer with a worsening balance sheet, another credit downgrade, and continued execution problems.”

In the past, Bombardier could frequently count on its train business to provide a floor value on the company’s shares when its plane0making side ran into trouble. But now, Mr. Quettawala says even that historic stability has cracked as the train unit’s profit margin falls.

The C Series as saviour

Still, Bombardier is far from finished.

Bombardier remains the leading manufacturer of rail transportation equipment in the world. It has historically had a solid position in business jets, especially on the larger-sized aircraft.

The aerospace reorganization should boost income. And Bombardier enjoys remarkable international brand recognition.

A weakening Canadian dollar should also help. And analysts note that the company has bounced back from liquidity issues before.

Mr. Aboulafia argues that when Bombardier put the Learjet 85 development program on ice, it was a de facto admission that it needed to save money everywhere it could so as to finish the jet programs that were a priority. The company this month also sold its military aviation training business to CAE Inc..

Bombardier called its Learjet 85 move a “pause,” insisting it would be revived when market conditions improve.

“[That’s like saying] ‘Kids, the vet had to pause the family dog,’ ” Mr. Aboulafia says. “You don’t fire 1,000 people and write off $1.4-billion for a pause. The 85 is clearly dead.”

As for the C Series, tests are going well now after previous delays.

Bombardier has completed one-third of the 2,400 flight test hours needed on the aircraft. With 150 hours of testing per month, the company should be able to achieve its target of putting the jet into service by the end of 2015.

The plane had its so-called cold soak testing in Montreal in January, where it is left outside overnight and restarted in the morning. So far, the jet is performing the way the company predicted it would. But whether the slick-looking and silent aircraft will achieve the kind of sales momentum and payoff the company hopes remains to be seen.

Bombardier has invested a lot of effort and capital on the C Series. The plane maker has secured support totalling $650-million (U.S.) from both the Canadian and U.K. governments and convinced Pratt & Whitney to develop a new fuel-saving engine for the plane.

But total development costs on the program have already blown out to more than $4.5-billion, a sum roughly equivalent to the current market value of Bombardier’s widely-traded B shares. As of the end of 2014, the plane maker had booked firm orders for 243 C Series units. It wants 300 by the time the first plane gets delivered.

Bombardier’s bet: That passengers, sick of having to fly through major airport hubs to get to where they are going, would appreciate a direct link on a single-aisle jet smaller than existing Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 aircraft. And that by manufacturing a plane with 15-per-cent lower operating costs, it could make it financially viable for airlines.

The company plans to make two models – the smaller CS100 with up to 125 seats and the larger CS300 with up to 160. In a forecast released last year, it predicted that demand for jets seating 100 to 149 people would be as many as 7,100 units over the next 20 years. It said it believed it could win half of those sales.

Intense competition

What Bombardier likely didn’t count on was such a forceful and immediate response from the world’s two big plane giants.

While Bombardier struggled with delays and convincing prospective clients it could deliver the C Series on time, Airbus and Boeing moved quickly to offer improved but not fully-redesigned versions of their smallest single-aisle planes.

Airbus was first, launching its A320neo line in 2010 – three planes ranging from 124 to 240 seats and promising better fuel economy. Featuring the same Pratt & Whitney engine as the C Series, the jets are being pledged to customers for a delivery date this November. It could beat the C Series to market.

Boeing followed with its revamped 737 Max line, offering roughly the same seat options and also promising savings on fuel burn. Then Brazilian regional jet rival Embraer jumped into the fray with a decision to outfit its commuter planes with new wings and longer fuselages. Its planes will also use the new Pratt engine.

Bombardier had expected Boeing and Airbus to respond to the C Series. But it didn’t figure it would happen so fast. The rivals’ strategy in sum: Put a new engine on existing planes, keep your current customers.

“The last thing Bombardier ever wanted to do was to have to compete with Boeing and Airbus, I can guarantee you that,” said Rolland Vincent, a U.S.-based aerospace consultant who worked for Bombardier Aerospace in the 1990s doing international market analysis.

Among the advantages the incumbents have over challenger Bombardier is their massive, multiyear backlogs. Boeing alone has enough single-aisle jet orders on its books for eight years of work.

That offers the company tremendous pricing power to offer discounts to customers. And it also gives them an edge on arguing for systemic continuity. Airline employee rosters around the world are full of pilots that know how to fly Airbus and Boeing planes. And a vast airport and maintenance infrastructure built for the more than 10,000 Airbus and Boeing single-aisle jets flying today makes planes from competing manufacturers a less obvious choice.

When it comes to market, the C Series will be more than two years late and likely over budget. The real test for the plane will be whether it sells in sufficient quantities to justify its development cost.

Kevin Michaels, vice-president of global aerospace consultancy ICF International, believes Bombardier will sell only 50 C Series units a year when the aircraft goes into service, well shy of the program’s likely break-even point. He notes that the company will also need $1-billion to bring the next-generation Global 7000/8000 business jets to market.

“As I look at the world as it is today, I’m not sure I see a real strong path for [Bombardier’s] air transport division,” Mr. Michaels said. “It’s a strategic problem. It’s not just a financial problem.”

Mr. Michaels raises the possibility that Bombardier will eventually decide to sell its entire commercial aircraft business to focus on higher-margin business aircraft manufacturing. He believes China-based plane maker Comac is a logical buyer, dubbing this the “Combardier” scenario. Bombardier executives have been multiplying their trips to China in recent years in an effort to better understand the market, he notes, adding that the Chinese would benefit most from Bombardier’s global product support system.

Faith in the future

Gary Scott, the former Boeing executive Mr. Beaudoin tapped to lead the C Series program before he retired, is among those who have faith in Bombardier’s future. He cautions that the vast majority of the single-aisle jet market – 80 per cent in fact – is above 150 seats. Bombardier is just competing for its share of the remaining 20 per cent. And he says that looks perfectly doable.

“I used to always say ‘It’s a lousy half-a-trillion-dollar market,” Mr. Scott said. “That’s a small number for Boeing and Airbus based on their $5-trillion-plus market. But it’s huge for Bombardier and Embraer.”

McGill University professor Karl Moore, who has brought Mr. Beaudoin to speak to his students, said the executive appears relaxed.

Bombardier has dropped the ball on execution compared to the company’s past record, Mr. Moore notes. But Pierre Beaudoin’s eyes are now squarely on the future.

“I don’t think he has to worry about Bay Street that much,” Mr. Moore said. Mr. Beadoin is thinking “I’m doing the right thing. I’m just going to push forward and I’m not going to quit,” Mr. Moore said.

“There are times when it doesn’t look good but it works out. And this is one of those times.”

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/repo...er-flies-a-risky-flight-path/article22848651/
 
Bombardier: 1,2 miliardi $ perdita 2014, Bellemare nuovo presidente e ceo


(Il Sole 24 Ore Radiocor) - Roma, 12 feb - Il gruppo Bombardier, nel 2014, ha accumulato una perdita netta pari a 1,2 miliardi di dollari, a fronte dei 572 milioni di utile del 2013. Nel quarto trimestre 2014, il 'rosso' e' stato pari a 1,6 miliardi di dollari, contro i 97 milioni di utile dello stesso periodo del 2013. Le perdite del quarto trimestre e dell'intero esercizio, spiega la societa' in una nota, sono principalmente legate alla decisione di sospendere il programma "Learjet 85". I ricavi 2014 sono saliti a 20,1 miliardi di dollari, dai 18,2 miliardi del 2013. Il consiglio di amministrazione ha nominato Alain Bellemare presidente e ceo del gruppo al posto di Pierre Beaudoin.

com-sal

(RADIOCOR) 12-02-15 15:22:31 (0387) 5 NNNN
 
Bombardier Delays CS300 First Flight

Flightglobal.com
Posted: 02.26.15

Bombardier has pushed back the first flight of its CS300 aircraft, due to unfavorable weather conditions in Mirabel, Quebec.

In a short statement, the Canadian aircraft manufacturer says first flight will no longer take place on 26 February, but adds that “we expect it will take place very soon”.
 
Bombardier's CSeries 300 Takes To The Skies

February 27, 2015

bombardier-cs300-inflight.jpg

Bombardier CS300 first flight.

Bombardier's CS300, the larger version of its new CSeries jet, took off on its first test flight at the Canadian company's testing and assembly facility near Montreal on Friday.

The CSeries, Bombardier's largest commercial aircraft, with up to 160 seats, takes the company into markets dominated by Boeing and Airbus.
Alain Bellemare, Bombardier's new chief executive, said the company remains committed to having the plane certified by the end of 2015, but that it could go into service a few weeks into 2016, depending on decisions made by customers. He played down the impact of delays.
"These are long-term programmes," Bellemare said. "Clearly we want to be on schedule, but when you have a one- or two-year delay that doesn't materially change the volume that you will get in the marketplace."
Bellemare took the helm earlier this month after Bombardier suspended dividends and laid out plans to raise USD$2 billion amid more cost overruns on the CSeries.
Bombardier has touted the CSeries' fuel economy as a key selling point, an advantage lessened by lower oil prices.
"For the airlines to take a step outside the box, it has to be worth something. The fuel efficiency of the CSeries was a big draw, but that has now diminished," said Ryan Bushell, a portfolio manager with Leon Frazer.
But Sebastien Mullot, Bombardier's CSeries programme director, said weaker oil prices lower costs, giving airlines more room to invest in new planes.
"You cannot just make decisions on fleet renewals or fleet acquisition based on the spot price of oil," he said, predicting a rise in oil prices and saying that airlines need to think long-term.
Wendell Perkins, a senior portfolio manager with Manulife Asset Management, said a slowing global economy may also affect airlines' purchasing decisions.
"The economic weakness is a concern, particularly given much of the interest in the CSeries has come from outside of the US market," he said. "While we still believe the CSeries will be launched by late 2015, or early 2016, the opportunity to reshape the market has probably been lost."

(Reuters)
 
Qatar Airways says no longer interested in CSeries



Qatar Airways is no longer interested in ordering any CSeries jets as as result of the delays to the new single-aisle aircraft made by Bombardier , Chief Executive Akbar Al Baker said on Wednesday.


"We have completely forgotten about it because you cannot wait indefinitely," he said in an interview on the sidelines of the ITB travel fair in Berlin.


He also said that Qatar Airways would wait at least a couple of years before deciding whether to order any more A380s after starting operations with its first of the superjumbos last year.


"I have to see the performance, I need at least a couple of years to see what added benefit this airplane has compared to the other types that we're operating," he said.


He said any revamp of the A380 would likely be a long way off.


"We will study it once they tell us what it is capable of doing," he said.


(Reuters)
 
Bombardier Inc may take CSeries writedown, selling program seen as viable option, analyst says

Jonathan Ratner | March 4, 2015 | Last Updated: Mar 4 10:47 AM ET
More from Jonathan Ratner | @jonratner

Bombardier Inc. may need to take a significant writedown on its CSeries program and could opt to make a more dramatic move to sell the entire project.

The first flight for Bombardier’s CS300 went off without a hitch — other than a weather-related delay. The aircraft flew for approximately five hours at various altitudes, and also appears to have completed a few tests that earned some certification credits for the CSeries program.

These are positive developments, as is the longevity of the flight, which Scotiabank analyst Turan Quettawala thinks could instill some confidence among investors in anticipation of a faster-than-expected ramp-up in flight test hours.

Bombardier still has several areas for potential improvement, not the least of which are the delays for the CSeries, but Mr. Quettawala also noted the potential for a writedown on the program.

“In our view, the program cost is way too high and the program is not likely to be value additive even if we take Bombardier’s relatively aggressive deliveries projections,” the analyst said in a research note. “As such, we think that the likelihood of the new CEO taking a write-down on the program is relatively high.”

He expects normalized CSeries deliveries of roughly 65 per year for the next 10 years. With a program cost of $5.4-billion, that generates negative value for Bombardier. Even using management’s delivery forecast of approximately 100 planes per year, Mr. Quettawala noted that the program generates zero to negative value over 20 years now that the project cost has ballooned by more than $2-billion.

“Not only is the development cost too high, Bombardier has also set up the production plan based on what we think are optimistic forecasts,” the analyst said. “As such, taking a write-down on the program and rebasing expectations to a lower level could result in improved future profitability as well as help Bombardier’s ability to compete with Airbus and Boeing.”

There is no guarantee how the market would react to such a move, but the money spent is already a sunk cost. And, as Mr. Quettawala points out, lower program tooling could help both amortization and margins.

He also suggested that selling the CSeries is a viable option for Bombardier, as it could help the company recoup half or more of its project cost.

“However, we are not sure if management is willing to throw in the towel just yet or if the political climate would allow this scenario to occur,” the analyst added.

http://business.financialpost.com/2...rogram-seen-as-viable-option/?__lsa=7584-1df6
 
Visto che si inserisce nel segmento del più fortunato SSJ, direi che il Cseries sta percorrendo il viale del tramonto, peccato , è un bell'aereo, ma un progetto troppo azzardato per Bombardier da sola, lo avesse fatto in Joint venture con qualche big chissà ......
 
Bombardier Resets CSeries Debut to 2016 as Timeline Slips Again

Bloomberg.com
Posted: 03.27.15

Bombardier Inc. delayed the delivery of the struggling CSeries jetliner again, targeting 2016 for the plane’s commercial debut after previously predicting that its flagship model would be in service by the end of this year.

Canadian certification of the plane should come in late 2015, Chief Executive Officer Alain Bellemare said Friday after a shareholder meeting in Montreal. He said that will set the stage for a handover next year to the first customer, which Bombardier hasn’t identified.

Bellemare insisted there was no change in the company’s timeline. “We have an entry into service schedule for our clients, and this schedule is in fact in 2016,” said Bellemare, who became CEO last month. “Before I arrived, it was already scheduled like that,” he said.

Still, the schedule is a retreat from longstanding comments targeting the end of this year. ...
 
Bombardier risks losing third-largest CSeries customer
By: STEPHEN TRIMBLEMOSCOW Source: 18:34 8 Apr 2015

Repeated delays and a new financing problem could drive Bombardier’s third-largest customer for the CSeries to cancel the order within a few months.

Moscow-based lessor Ilyushin Finance Corporation (IFC) has decided to “re-evaluate all our options regarding our participation in this programme,” director general Alexander Rubtsov says in an interview.

The review marks a swift change in enthusiasm by the Russian lessor since signing the order for 32 CS300s in February 2014.

IFC is partly-owned by Russian aircraft manufacturing conglomerate United Aircraft Corporation. Its charter calls on the lessor to help launch and buy locally-built aircraft.

The deal signed 15 months ago bolstered the slow-selling CSeries orderbook and offered the Canadian manufacturer a key opportunity to break into the Russian market.

Bombardier says that IFC remains a “solid, valued customer. It’s our understanding that the CSeries aircraft makes up an important component of IFC’s expansion plans and we are therefore confident we can work together to overcome any concerns”.

But Rubtsov says he has grown impatient waiting for the CSeries to be delivered. The cost of the deal also grew after the Canadian government banned Russian companies from having access to export bank financing with lower interest rates, he says. The ban was imposed as part of Canada’s response to the conflict in Ukraine.

IFC now plans to decide whether to cancel, amend or proceed with the CSeries order at the Paris air show, which begins on 15 June, Rubtsov says.

IFC’s decision will not be linked to any concerns about the aircraft’s performance. Rubtsov recently returned from a quarterly meeting with Bombardier in Montreal, and, he says, the performance of the CS100 flight test aircraft is “quite spectacular”. With the exception of a small weight increase, the CS100 is meeting Bombardier’s promises for fuel efficiency and range, he says.

In addition to the financing problem, however, IFC is concerned Bombardier will announce another schedule delay, Rubtsov says. The CS100 was originally expected to enter service in late 2013, with the stretched CS300 following six months later. It is now scheduled to be certificated in the second half of 2015. It was also supposed to enter service by the end of the year, but newly-appointed Bombardier chief executive Alain Bellemare has recently said that entry into service could slip into 2016.

IFC is also weighing the CSeries requirement against new pressure from the Russian government to support the Sukhoi Superjet. The Russian government has recently committed to invest 100 billion rubles ($1.86 billion) to recapitalise the Superjet programme. If consummated, part of the money could be directed to IFC to buy another tranche of Superjets, and that could come at the expense of the CSeries.

Bombardier has 243 firm orders for the CSeries, which is 57 short of its goal to have 300 aircraft on backlog by entry into service. IFC’s order for 32 aircraft is exceeded only by the 40 aircraft each under contract by Republic Airways and Macquarie Finance.

http://www.flightglobal.com/news/ar...losing-third-largest-cseries-customer-410987/
 
OPINION: Bombardier is still in the game - just

By: FLIGHT INTERNATIONAL
LONDON
Source:

The problems mount at Bombardier. Every promising piece of news – entry into flight testing of the CS300 in February – is outweighed by the bad: rumours of a further delay to CS100 first delivery, and now an admission by third-largest customer, Ilyushin Finance, that it is re-evaluating its commitment to the CSeries.The company – controlled still by the family that transformed it from snowmobile maker to global aerospace and rail transportation combine – is at least not in denial, having brought in industry heavyweight Alain Bellemare to replace a Beaudoin, and with a clear mandate to take firm and decisive action.The former UTC executive’s broom has begun to sweep, with the latest high-profile exit that of commercial aircraft head Mike Arcamone. Bellemare is determined to bring in new talent with fresh perspectives after a five-year spell in which Bombardier has failed to gain market traction with its flagship programme.Ilyushin Finance chief Alexander Rubtsov could, of course, be taking advantage of Bombardier’s stricken position to improve his bargaining leverage, given the worsening economic circumstances in Russia where he will be hoping to place most of his aircraft.However, the Canadian firm can ill afford to lose one of its four big customers. Macquarrie, Republic Airways, Ilyushin Finance and Lufthansa account for more than half of total CSeries orders. It seems unlikely that – even with a debut at June’s Paris air show – other blue-chip operators are waiting in the wings.For Bombardier to restore confidence, it must do three things. Above all, it has to keep flight testing on track. Second, it should urgently agree terms with a launch customer. It takes months to prepare an airline to introduce a new aircraft into service and Bombardier is losing valuable time. Third, it must find a way to sell the CSeries to new buyers. If Bombardier’s four largest customers are becoming restless, it will not be enough to simply convert options to keep production on pace.Bellemare’s job remains the toughest in aerospace, but the markets have not abandoned Bombardier yet. Moody’s has just raised its liquidity rating, based on the fact that, though up to its neck in debt, Bombardier has at least got cash to get the CSeries to certification.That done, it is simply a matter of convincing airlines that this is an aircraft that can do a job for them, and ensuring a smooth entry into service. While that would not solve all Bombardier’s woes, making a success of the CSeries would at least allow Bellemare and his team to focus on the bigger picture.

http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/opinion-bombardier-is-still-in-the-game-just-411028/
 
Bombardier Working with Advisers on Rail Unit Spinoff, Report Says

Bizjournals.com (Wichita Business Journal)
Posted: 04.16.15

Bombardier Inc., the Canadian plane and train maker that owns Learjet in Wichita, has hired UBS Group AG and Citigroup Inc. to advise on the possible spinoff of its rail unit, according to a report from Bloomberg.

Sources tell Bloomberg that the rail unit, viewed as the healthier part of Bombardier's business, could be worth about $5 billion. Analysts say a spinoff could help the company focus on turning around its aerospace unit, which posted a $995 million loss last year. …
 
Non ne capisco la logica. Cioè, la parte più produttiva la vendono per focalizzarsi su quella che perde soldi a palate? In genere non si cerca di vendere la parte azzoppata?

DaV
Spin off non vuol dire vendita, ma scorporo e quotazione. in questo modo si valorizza un asset per fare cassa.
In genere il mercato non la prende bene (ma Fiat ha fatto lo stesso con successo con le attività non automotive)
 
Vedremo...

Swiss International Air Lines expects first CSeries delivery in late 2016

Swiss International Air Lines has confirmed it expects delivery of its first Bombardier CSeries 100 in the second part of 2016, Swiss spokesperson Karin Mueller told ATW. “Originally, we expected to have the first aircraft in our fleet in 2014,” Mueller added. The much-delayed CSeries’ original schedule called for it to be in service by the end of 2013. Certification is now on track for year end.




 
SWISS Revealed as First Airline in the World to Take Delivery and Operate the Bombardier CSeries Aircraft
May 7, 2015 — Montréal
Aerospace, Press Release

•Bombardier targeting year-end 2015 for CS100 aircraft’s type certification; CSeries aircraft will enter service with SWISS, as the first operator, in first half of 2016
•CSeries aircraft slated to make its world debut at the International Paris Air Show in June, followed by a demonstration at SWISS headquarters in Zürich
Montréal, May 7, 2015 – Bombardier Commercial Aircraft and Swiss International Air Lines (SWISS) announced today that SWISS will be the first customer to take delivery and operate the CSeries aircraft when the CS100 aircraft enters service in the first half of 2016. Bombardier also confirmed today that the CSeries aircraft will make its world debut at the International Paris Air Show being held at Le Bourget, France and will fly directly to Zürich, Switzerland in June as part of a demonstration organized for SWISS’ local stakeholders.

SWISS was previously announced as the launch customer for the CSeries aircraft program after parent Deutsche Lufthansa AG (Lufthansa) signed a firm purchase agreement in 2009 for 30 CS100 single-aisle aircraft for SWISS.

“Following the performance results and flight test data, we are pleased that the CSeries aircraft is very much in line with our performance expectations and sustainable fleet requirements. Therefore, we are looking forward to being both the launch customer and the first airline that will operate the CS100 aircraft,” said Harry Hohmeister, Chief Executive Officer, Swiss International Air Lines. “It’s an honour to mark this occasion with the confirmation that the CS100 aircraft will make an appearance at our hub in Zürich mid-June.”

“SWISS has long been an interactive and highly engaged customer; participating in the many development aspects of Bombardier’s CSeries aircraft - it’s only fitting that our friends from SWISS be the first to operate the CS100 aircraft in service,” said Fred Cromer, President, Bombardier Commercial Aircraft.

“SWISS and its parent Lufthansa are known for their cutting-edge technical and operational excellence and we look forward to supporting them as our first operator.”

http://www.bombardier.com/en/media-...dtotakedeliveryandoperatet.bombardiercom.html
 
E' una mia impressione o Bombardier ha seri problemi?

Bombardier announces rate cut for Global 5000/6000

By: STEPHEN TRIMBLE
WASHINGTON DC
Source: Flightglobal.com
an hour ago​
Aggressive pricing by competitors and weakening demand in emerging markets are drivingBombardier to slow its deliveries of the Global 5000 and 6000 just two years after ramping up production to 80 aircraft per year, company executives say.As the production rate for the two large-cabin, long-range business jets is reduced over the next 12 to 18 months, Bombardier is also withdrawing a timeline for delivering the first Global 7000 and 8000 jets.Bombardier had previously released plans to deliver the first certificated Global 7000 in 2016 and Global 8000 in 2018, but is no longer offering a schedule, chief executive Alain Bellemare said during a 7 May earnings call.The original schedule targeted delivery of the Global 7000 three years after entry into service of the first CS100, but delays to the CSeries schedule means delivery of the first small narrowbody airliner is overlapping with the business jet programme.Meanwhile, Bombardier is slowing deliveries of the Global 5000 and 6000 after business jet operating margins contracted to 7% in the first quarter – about half those at the company’s competitors.That performance is the first sign of weakness in a large-cabin sector that had previously been healthy for all manufacturers. In 2013, Bombardier responded to rising demand by increasing production rates by about 60%, with deliveries rising from about 50 to around 80 in 2014.But sales have weakened in Russia, China and Latin America for Bombardier’s aircraft. “These markets have been softer than we’d like,” says Bellemare. “Our competitors are also aggressive out there.”

http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/bombardier-announces-rate-cut-for-global-50006000-412065/





 
Si, intendevo la divisione aeronautica. D'altra parte se devono vendere una quota della divisione rail, la situazione deve essere seria.
Trovo soprattutto molto preoccupante che siano sparite le date relative ai nuovi Global 7000 e 8000.
Mentre è sicuro che gli attuali Global 5000 e 6000 sentiranno sempre più la concorrenza dei nuovi Gulfstream 500/600 e Falcon 5x/8x.
 
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