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Avolon CEO sees robust demand for aircraft, especially in Asia
  + stars: | 2024-11-05 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAvolon CEO sees robust demand for aircraft, especially in AsiaAndy Cronin, CEO of Avalon, talks about demand for aircraft leasing and uncertainties caused by the COVID pandemic, and supply restrictions in Boeing and Airbus. He says the Asia Pacific region is leading in growth, with India being particularly attractive.
Persons: Asia Andy Cronin Organizations: Avalon, Boeing, Airbus Locations: Asia, India
Five-star carrier Singapore Airlines is investing $830 million to retrofit 41 Airbus A350 planes. Business class doors are increasingly popular as flyers demand more privacy in high-dollar cabins. The privacy door, a flyer favorite, is an increasingly popular perk in business class. Singapore opted for privacy wings instead of a door on its existing A350 business class, which Business Insider flew in January 2023. Singapore's A350-900ULR will add three business class seats but lose 36 premium economy seats to make room for first class.
Persons: , Taylor Rains, Goh Choon Phong Organizations: Singapore Airlines, Boeing 777X, Service, Airbus, Singapore, Business, Insider Airlines, Air, American Airlines, British Airways, Korean Air, Turkish Airlines, Boeing, Qatar Airways, Cathay Locations: Qatar, Air India, Singapore, New York City, Singapore Airlines Singapore, London, Hong
Singapore Airlines is planning to add a four-seat first class to the Airbus aircraft it uses for its longest routes, a bet to attract high-spending travelers to flights that can top 17 hours. The carrier will add the new seats to seven Airbus A350-900 URLs, or ultra-long-range aircraft that it uses for lengthy trips, including its longest, between New York and Singapore. Singapore said the new first- and business-class seats will have new in-flight entertainment but the carrier didn't disclose many details about the new cabins. Airlines have been investing billions of dollars to revamp their premium cabins to chase travelers willing to shell out for more space on board. They range from international airlines Singapore Airlines to smaller carriers like JetBlue Airways , whose long-range twin-aisle jets used for trips across the Atlantic feature suites with sliding doors.
Persons: Goh Choon Phong Organizations: Singapore Airlines, Airbus, Airlines, JetBlue Airways Locations: New York, Singapore
It has nine intakes of 20 cadets this year for its Airline Transport Pilots Licence (ATPL) course that costs £105,500 ($136,000). It acquired another site in Vero Beach, Florida, where UK cadets spend six months of their course. Related Video Why flying is so terrible even though airlines spend billionsBooth says airlines are "very much knocking on our door" as they look to recruit new pilots. Skyborne cadets and British Airways CEO Sean Doyle at this year's Farnborough Airshow. Courtesy of British AirwaysLife at SkyborneWhen a new course starts at Skyborne, cadets move into the academy's accommodation in nearby Cheltenham.
Persons: , Carla Booth, Booth, Oliver Wyman, Skyborne, Sean Doyle, Vicky Harriss, Libby Roebuck, Roebuck, There's, she's, I've, Harriss, Diamond, Pete Syme, They've Organizations: Business, Service, Gloucestershire, Airline, Delta Air Lines, British Airways, Speedbird, Academy, BI, TUI Airways, International Civil Aviation Organization, Airlines, Cadets, Piper, Boeing, Max, Airbus Locations: Florida, India, England, Vero Beach , Florida, America, Farnborough, Skyborne, Cheltenham, TUI
"Blended-wing" aircraft could be the future of commercial aviation. Airbus and startups JetZero and Natilus lead the development of these more efficient flying wings. Among the most likely concepts is a "blended-wing" body aircraft, which combines the fuselage and wing into one. A handful of companies have announced plans to build these unique vessels by the 2030s, including startups JetZero and Natilus and long-standing planemaker Airbus. The company has decades of experience designing commercial airplanes — leading the industry with its best-selling Airbus A320 family of similar capacity.
Persons: Organizations: Airbus, Service, Aircraft, US Air Force, Boeing, Pathfinder
CNN —Spurred by increasing global demand for air travel, aviation emissions have been rising faster than those from rail, road, or shipping in recent decades. The Natilus Horizon passenger plane aims to reduce emissions by 50%, and increase payload by 40%, due to its blended-wing body shape. Matyushev says the blended wing body design originated in the 1990s from McDonnell Douglas, a major American aerospace manufacturer that merged with Boeing in 1997. Boeing never commercialized a blended wing plane, but studied the concept and produced an unmanned prototype, the X-48. “One of the challenges with the blended wing body design is stability and control,” he explains.
Persons: JetZero, Natilus, , Aleksey Matyushev, Matyushev, McDonnell Douglas, , , you’re, Gary Crichlow, Max, ” Natilus, Crichlow Organizations: CNN, Aviation, SAF, Airbus, Boeing, Max, Aviation News Limited Locations: California, San Diego, Kona, American, Natilus, JetZero
Some airlines have bought Airbus' new extra-long-haul A321XLR to replace their aging Boeing 757s. That's about 800 miles further than its predecessor and at least 880 miles further than its closest competitor: the aging, out-of-production Boeing 757. Carriers like United Airlines and Icelandair are lining up for the new jet, putting in more than 550 orders so far. Continental Airlines, now United Airlines, switched its 757-300 order to the newer 737-800 in 2003, for example. Icelandair will also replace its 757 fleet with the A321XLR, abandoning the largely all-Boeing fleet it has operated for decades.
Persons: , Bjorn Fehrm, Boeing's, Icelandair, it's Organizations: Airbus, Boeing, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Service, Carriers, Iberia, Continental Airlines, Leeham, Seattle Times, Max, United, Business Locations: Spanish, France, North Africa
Budget airlines like Spirit, Frontier, and Southwest are struggling to turn a profit. The still-in-service airlines Neeleman founded, like JetBlue Airways, Azul Brazilian Airlines, Canada's WestJet, and Breeze Airways, largely follow this idea. Historically, these strategies have been absent from the likes of Spirit, Frontier, and Southwest, which have stuck to all-economy aircraft with little choice. Southwest Airlines boats an open-seating policy where seats are first-co,me first-serve. Low-cost airlines should continue to ditch barebones planesSouthwest shouldn't be the only one to move away from historical norms.
Persons: David Neeleman, , David Neeleman —, Thomas Pallini, haven't, Neeleman, that's, Barry Biffle, They're, we've, WestJet, Scott Kirby, doesn't, Kevin Carter, Breeze Organizations: Service, JetBlue —, Breeze Airways, Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, Street, Frontier, Neeleman, JetBlue Airways, Azul Brazilian Airlines, JetBlue, Southwest Airlines, Morris Air, Spirit, Airbus Locations: Southwest, Frontier, Breeze
An Airbus A321XLR Neo passenger aircraft performs a flying display at the Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, Paris, France, on Monday, June 19, 2023. Airbus said Wednesday that it has handed over its first extra-long-range narrow-body aircraft, the A321XLR, marking another step in an era of smaller and more fuel-efficient jets flying longer distances, and further expanding a delivery gap between Airbus and rival Boeing . The first aircraft was delivered to Spain's Iberia, which plans to debut it between Madrid and Boston next month. American Airlines and United Airlines have also ordered the 321XLRs. The plane maker has been working on getting the aircraft certified for five years.
Organizations: Airbus, Paris Air, Boeing, American Airlines and United Airlines, JetBlue Locations: Le Bourget, Paris, France, Iberia, Madrid, Boston, New York, Amsterdam
Budget airlines like Spirit, Frontier, and Southwest are struggling to turn a profit. Low-cost veteran David Neeleman told BI that Spirit and Frontier should merge to survive. The still-in-service airlines Neeleman founded, like JetBlue Airways, Azul Brazilian Airlines, Canada's WestJet, and Breeze Airways, largely follow this idea. Historically, these strategies have been absent from the likes of Spirit, Frontier, and Southwest, which have stuck to all-economy aircraft with little choice. Southwest Airlines boats an open-seating policy where seats are first-co,me first-serve.
Persons: David Neeleman, , David Neeleman —, Thomas Pallini, haven't, Neeleman, that's, Barry Biffle, They're, we've, WestJet, Scott Kirby, doesn't, Kevin Carter, Breeze Organizations: Service, JetBlue —, Breeze Airways, Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, Street, Frontier, Neeleman, JetBlue Airways, Azul Brazilian Airlines, JetBlue, Southwest Airlines, Morris Air, Spirit, Airbus Locations: Southwest, Frontier, Breeze
JetBlue's full-year revenue forecast misses estimates, shares fall
  + stars: | 2024-10-29 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
JetBlue Airways forecast a bigger-than-expected fall in 2024 revenue amid a moderation in domestic travel demand ahead of the upcoming U.S. elections, sending its shares down 4.5% before the bell on Tuesday. Election-related uncertainty is expected to weigh on travel demand as consumers prefer to be home and hold off on major discretionary spending. The New York-based carrier expects its 2024 revenue to fall between 4% and 5%, compared with analysts' average expectation of a 3.6% fall, according to data compiled by LSEG. JetBlue, however, managed to report a smaller-than-expected third-quarter loss on Tuesday, owing to improved demand and pricing in the quarter. The airline reported an adjusted loss of 16 cents per share, compared with estimates of a 25 cents loss.
Persons: Milton, LSEG Organizations: Jet Blue, Airbus, JFK International, JetBlue Airways, JetBlue, Pratt, Spirit Airlines Locations: New York, Florida, The New York, U.S
AdvertisementJohn F. Kennedy International Airport broke ground on a new Terminal One in September 2022. A private consortium is investing $9.5 billion to modernize the new terminal, focusing on safety, efficiency, and the customer experience. New Terminal OneDevelopers hope the future state-of-the-art terminal will become a Skytrax five-star airport terminal — a feat no US airport had achieved until New York's LaGuardia Airport finally ditched its infamous "LaGarbage" nickname with a new and improved Terminal B in 2023. This includes facial recognition boarding, AI-powered gate systems, and air traffic technology to reduce the chance of near misses. If the technology works as promised, I'd look forward to flying through.
Persons: John F, SITA's, Taylor Rains, Taha Zahir, LaGuardia, Zahir Organizations: Kennedy International Airport, Port Authority of New, JFK, Phillippines Airlines, Air, New, Department of Transportation, Business, JFK's, BI, British Airways, Flyers, TSA, Changi Airport, Korean, ADB Locations: York, Port Authority of New York, North America, Air France, Long, London, Changi, NYC's, LaGuardia, Los Angeles
On Thursday, Spirit Airlines unveiled plans to cut costs and raise cash amid bankruptcy reports. Its stock rose after it said it would sell $519 million of Airbus jets and cut staff. AdvertisementSpirit Airlines' woes are growing more apparent as it works to raise cash by selling planes and cutting staff. AdvertisementIn a Thursday regulatory filing, Spirit said that it had agreed to sell 23 Airbus planes to GAT Telesis — a firm that specializes in aircraft maintenance, leasing, and selling parts. The airline's stock rose around 12% in pre-market trading Friday, suggesting Spirit may have found a route to avoid bankruptcy.
Persons: , Spirit, GAT Telesis Organizations: Spirit Airlines, Airbus, JetBlue, Service, Airlines, Street, Frontier, Pratt & Whitney, Spirit, Business Locations: Delta
A startup planemaker announced a 200-passenger "blended wing body" plane to rival Airbus and Boeing. AdvertisementAircraft manufacturer Natilus wants to build a new type of airliner to rival Airbus and Boeing as the industry demands more efficient planes. Natilus said its Horizon plane would be up to 50% more fuel efficient per passenger. Natilus joins a growing list of BWB plane developers. Airbus announced its BWB jetliner in 2020, while JetZero unveiled its "Pathfinder" widebody BWB design in April.
Persons: , Natilus, Aleksey Matyushev, Matyushev, it's, Natilus Matyushev, JetZero Organizations: Airbus, Boeing, Service, Aircraft, Airlines, Max, SAF, Emirates Locations: California, Europe, Hawaii, Kona
Spirit Airlines baggage tags are seen near a check-in counter at the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport on April 10, 2024 in Austin, Texas. Spirit Airlines shares surged after the struggling budget carrier said it would cut jobs and sell aircraft. That sale will bring in $519 million, Spirit said in a securities filing. Earlier this week, The Wall Street Journal reported that Spirit and Frontier Airlines have revived merger discussions, sending shares higher. The two budget airlines had a merger agreement that was derailed by JetBlue 's April 2022 offer to purchase Spirit outright.
Persons: Spirit, didn't Organizations: Austin, Bergstrom International Airport, Austin , Texas . Spirit Airlines, Airbus, Pratt & Whitney, JetBlue Airways, Street Journal, Frontier Airlines, JetBlue Locations: Austin , Texas
Boeing 737 fuselages on railcars at Spirit AeroSystems' factory in Wichita, Kansas, US, on Monday, July 1, 2024. Spirit AeroSystems is weighing furloughs or layoffs of hundreds more employees if the Boeing machinists' strike stretches beyond Nov. 25, a company spokesman told CNBC Thursday. Further reductions would be in addition to those furloughs, but no decision has been made, said Spirit spokesman Joe Buccino. Spirit's consideration of additional furloughs demonstrates how the lengthy strike is weighing on an already-fragile aerospace supply chain. More than 32,000 Boeing machinists in the Puget Sound area, Oregon and other locations walked off the job on Sept. 13 after turning down an earlier tentative agreement.
Persons: Boeing's machinists, Max, Joe Buccino Organizations: Boeing, CNBC, Airbus, Boeing machinists, Puget Locations: Wichita , Kansas, Seattle, Oregon
Airlines are doubling down on high-margin premium cabins and even expanding them on new planes. American Airlines on Thursday reported an 8% increase in premium revenue in the third quarter compared with the prior year. Its rivals Delta Air Lines and United Airlines reported similar premium revenue growth in the quarter, at 4% and 5%. Courtesy of Delta Air LinesLeaning more into premium seats could fill that financial void. United Airlines' Polaris business class.
Persons: , Andrew Nocella, American's, Vasu Raja, Robert Isom, haven't Organizations: United, Service, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Airlines, Suite, American Airlines Delta, Boeing, Airbus, stoke, United Airlines ' Polaris, Frontier Airlines, Spirit Airlines, Spirit, JetBlue Airways, Southwest Airlines
CEO Kelly Ortberg has vowed to turn around the company and laid out a four-point plan. CEO Kelly Ortberg vowed to "return Boeing to its former legacy" and said the company would focus on changing its culture. However, restoring the traditional defined-benefit pension plan — replaced with a 401(k) in 2014 negotiations — has been a key issue for many on the picket lines. Bank of America analysts estimated that restoring this pension plan would cost up to $400 million annually. Boeing's production has been limited as it faces supply-chain constraints and renewed scrutiny from regulators in the wake of January's Alaska Airlines blowout.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, , Manuel Valdes, William Blair, Peter McNally, China's, McNally, Morningstar's Nicolas Owens, Ortberg Organizations: Boeing, Service, CNBC, Wall Street, Labor, Seattle Times, Bank of America, Anderson Economic Group, AP, Alaska Airlines, Airbus Locations: Seattle, Pacific Northwest
That is the Boeing unit that has been the most troubled, but the strike affected only the last two weeks of the three-month period. Boeing reported a $2.4 billion operating loss in its space and defense business, which is not affected by the strike. “First and foremost on everybody’s mind today is ending the IAM strike,” Ortberg told investors. Members of the International Association of Machinists from Boeing hold a march during an ongoing strike in Seattle, on October 15. Fortunately for Boeing, it is not likely it will be forced out of business by its current financial crisis.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, ” Ortberg, “ We’re, We’ve, , , Starliner, , Ortberg, Seth Seifman, Seifman, David Ryder, “ We’ve, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, CNBC, International, Station, NASA, SpaceX, IAM, JPMorgan Chase, Reuters, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus Locations: New York, , Seattle, Washington
New York CNN —The strike by 33,000 workers at Boeing will continue after rank-and-file union members rejected an offer from the company in a vote on Wednesday and decided to remain on the picket lines instead. The membership of the International Association of Machinists voted 64% against the deal, the union announced late Wednesday. “Our members deserve more,” said Jon Holden, the president of the largest IAM local at Boeing and its chief negotiator. The offer would have raised wages for IAM members at Boeing by 35 percentage points over the four-year life of the contract, with an immediate 12% raise. Loss of pension a ‘sticking point’Among the major issues for many members was the loss of a traditional pension plan.
Persons: , , Jon Holden, Holden, haven’t, Seth Seifman, Seifman, Kelly Ortberg, ” Ortberg, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, IAM, Union, JPMorgan Chase, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus Locations: New York
Qatar Airways' first flight using Elon Musk's Starlink took off on Tuesday. The SpaceX CEO previously joined a video call with the Qatar CEO, who was on board a test flight. AdvertisementQatar Airways has launched its first flight featuring Elon Musk's Starlink internet. On a previous test flight, Musk joined a video call with Qatar Airways CEO Badr Mohammed Al-Meer. Related stories"It's only going to get better," Musk replied.
Persons: Elon Musk's Starlink, , Elon Musk's, Musk, Badr Mohammed Al, Meer, Saad bin Ali Al, Skytrax — Organizations: Qatar Airways, Elon, SpaceX, Business, Service, Boeing, London Heathrow, Airbus, Qatar Tourism, Qatar —, Skytrax, Hawaiian Airlines, United Airlines, Air Locations: Qatar, Doha, Al, Air France
Qatar Airways Group CEO Badr Al Meer (center) and Qatar Tourism Chairman Saad bin Ali Al Kharji (left) speak with Elon Musk (right) via Starlink on board the flight. Qatar Airways launched Tuesday its inaugural Boeing 777 flight equipped with Elon Musk's Starlink internet, paving the way for a new era of in-flight connectivity across its entire fleet by next year. To demonstrate the milestone, Qatar Airways CEO Badr Al Meer held a video call with Starlink founder Musk while flying at 35,000 feet from Doha to London. Qatar Airways' move to introduce free high-speed internet across its fleet is a direct challenge to competitor airlines who typically offer lower-speed and often patchy paid services, or status-restricted wi-fi access to the flying public. Over time I think you'll find it just gets better and better," Musk said before Al Meer gave him a video tour of the cockpit.
Persons: Badr Al Meer, Saad bin Ali Al Kharji, Elon Musk, Elon Musk's, Musk, We're, Al Meer, Saad bin Ali Al, Kharji Organizations: Qatar Airways Group, Qatar Tourism, Qatar Airways, Boeing, Elon, Qatari, Airbus Locations: Qatar, Starlink, Doha, London, Qatari
Tentative deal announced to end Boeing strike
  + stars: | 2024-10-19 | by ( Chris Isidore | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
New York CNN —A tentative deal has been reached to end the five-week-long strike at troubled aircraft maker Boeing, the union announced to its 33,000 striking members early Saturday. Rank-and-file already nearly unanimously rejected a previous tentative agreement, precipitating the first strike at the company in 16 years. Many union members had expressed anger over the loss of the pensions. The union credited Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su with brokering the deal in indirect talks between the union and management. A week after that deal was rejected, Boeing improved its offer to 30% in wage increases over the four-year deal, terming that its best and final offer.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, Julie Su, Su, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, International Longshoremen’s Association, Gulf, Airbus, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration Locations: New York
Embraer CEO Francisco Gomes Neto speaks during the Embraer Media Day 2022 at the aircraft factory in Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil, May 30, 2022. Brazilian plane maker Embraer SA is studying the market and new technology that could warrant it building an all-new jet, CEO Francisco Gomes Neto told CNBC. A new airplane could help the airplane manufacturer compete with much larger rivals Airbus and Boeing , which deliver hundreds of jets a year compared with Embraer's dozens of aircraft. But Gomes Neto noted that no decisions have been made yet. In the meantime, Gomes Neto said Embraer is focused on improving results and selling its regional planes, which won orders earlier this year from American Airlines , manufacturing its E2 jet and "delivering what we promise" customers.
Persons: Francisco Gomes Neto, Sao Jose dos Campos, Gomes Neto Organizations: Embraer, Embraer Media, Embraer SA, CNBC, Airbus, Boeing, American Airlines Locations: Sao Jose, Brazil, Brazilian
Several airlines have criticized Boeing for delivery delays. Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary told Reuters Wednesday that the airline is likely to cut its traffic growth expectations for next year as it predicts delivery delays. Also on Wednesday, at an Irish think tank event, the head of the world's foremost airline trade group spoke out about delivery delays. AdvertisementLast Friday, Boeing announced further delays to its 777X jet, with its first delivery pushed from 2025 to 2026. AdvertisementThe Boeing 777X was delayed again last week, leading to sharp criticism from the boss of Emirates, one of Boeing's biggest customers.
Persons: Michael O'Leary, , O'Leary, Willie Walsh, Walsh, Tim Clark, GIUSEPPE CACACE, I've, Carsten Spohr, Spohr Organizations: Boeing, Service, Ryanair, Reuters, International Air Transport Association, Guardian, Airbus . Supply, Alaska Airlines, Emirates, Business, Getty, Lufthansa, Airlines, Europe, Financial Times, BI Locations: Irish, AFP, Emirates
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