-
French ice dancers poised for Winter Olympics gold amid turmoil
-
Norway's Ruud wins error-strewn Olympic freeski slopestyle
-
More Olympic pain for Shiffrin as Austria win team combined
-
Itoje returns to captain England for Scotland Six Nations clash
-
Sahara celebrates desert cultures at Chad festival
-
US retail sales flat in December as consumers pull back
-
Bumper potato harvests spell crisis for European farmers
-
Bangladesh's PM hopeful Rahman warns of 'huge' challenges ahead
-
Guardiola seeks solution to Man City's second half struggles
-
Shock on Senegalese campus after student dies during police clashes
-
US vice president Vance on peace bid in Azerbaijan after Armenia visit
-
'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike
-
Shiffrin misses out on Olympic combined medal as Austria win
-
India look forward to Pakistan 'challenge' after T20 World Cup U-turn
-
EU lawmakers back plans for digital euro
-
Starmer says UK govt 'united', presses on amid Epstein fallout
-
Olympic chiefs offer repairs after medals break
-
Moscow chokes Telegram as it pushes state-backed rival app
-
ArcelorMittal confirms long-stalled French steel plant revamp
-
New Zealand set new T20 World Cup record partnership to crush UAE
-
Norway's Ruud wins Olympic freeski slopestyle gold after error-strewn event
-
USA's Johnson gets new gold medal after Olympic downhill award broke
-
Von Allmen aims for third gold in Olympic super-G
-
Liverpool need 'perfection' to reach Champions League, admits Slot
-
Spotify says active users up 11 percent in fourth quarter to 751 mn
-
IOC allows Ukrainian athlete to wear black armband at Olympics for war dead
-
AstraZeneca profit jumps as cancer drug sales grow
-
Waseem's 66 enables UAE to post 173-6 against New Zealand
-
Stocks mostly rise tracking tech, earnings
-
Say cheese! 'Wallace & Gromit' expo puts kids into motion
-
BP profits slide awaiting new CEO
-
USA's Johnson sets up Shiffrin for tilt at Olympic combined gold
-
Trump tariffs hurt French wine and spirits exports
-
Bangladesh police deploy to guard 'risky' polling centres
-
OpenAI starts testing ads in ChatGPT
-
Three-year heatwave bleached half the planet's coral reefs: study
-
England's Buttler calls McCullum 'as sharp a coach as I ever worked with'
-
Israel PM to meet Trump with Iran missiles high on agenda
-
Macron says wants 'European approach' in dialogue with Putin
-
Georgia waiting 'patiently' for US reset after Vance snub
-
US singer leaves talent agency after CEO named in Epstein files
-
Skipper Marsh tells Australia to 'get the job done' at T20 World Cup
-
South Korea avert boycott of Women's Asian Cup weeks before kickoff
-
Barcelona's unfinished basilica hits new heights despite delays
-
Back to black: Philips posts first annual profit since 2021
-
South Korea police raid spy agency over drone flight into North
-
'Good sense' hailed as blockbuster Pakistan-India match to go ahead
-
Man arrested in Thailand for smuggling rhino horn inside meat
-
Man City eye Premier League title twist as pressure mounts on Frank and Howe
-
South Korea police raid spy agency over drone flights into North
Airbus first-half profit climbs 85% to $1.7 bn
European aerospace group Airbus posted an 85-percent rise in first-half profit Wednesday to $1.7 billion, even though it delivered fewer commercial planes compared with the same period last year.
Citing "persistent engine supply issues" for its popular A320 jets, Airbus said 306 planes had been delivered overall in the first half, down from 323 in the first half of 2024.
It said it secured net orders for 402 aircraft in the first half, up from 310 in the same period last year, helping to push revenues up three percent to 29.6 billion euros.
The jump in profits to 1.5 billion euros came a year after Airbus reported a 46-percent slump in earnings for the first half of 2024.
Operating profit, which analysts often consider a better gauge of underlying business performance, rose 11 percent to 1.6 billion euros.
Looking ahead, Airbus said its targets did not exclude the potential impact from the US tariffs being imposed by President Donald Trump, and it still expected to deliver 820 commercial aircraft this year.
"On tariffs, the recent political agreement between the EU and the US to revert to a zero-tariff approach for civil aircraft is a welcome development for our industry," chief executive Guillaume Faury said in a statement.
At the end of last month, 60 planes were still waiting to receive their engines from CFM, a joint venture between the Safran and GE groups, as well as Pratt & Whitney engines, Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury said in a press conference call.
— No engines, toilets —
"In terms of aircraft production and availability, with the exception of the engines for these aircraft, we are actually much further ahead than 306 aircraft at the current stage," said Faury, expressing confidence in meeting the 820 delivery forecast.
"We have a credible second-half plan," he added, recalling that in 2018, Airbus delivered 303 planes in the first half but hit 800 for the year as a whole.
Airbus's director of commercial aircraft, Christian Scherer, said in June that other aircraft, particularly the wide-body A350, were suffering a backlog due to a toilet shortage.
"You can't really build an airplane without a toilet," he quipped ahead of the Paris Air Show, highlighting the fragile state of the sector's supply chain, where a small bottleneck can put at risk ambitious commercial programmes.
A year ago, Airbus's half-year net profit plummeted 46 percent due to expenses related to space activities.
Responding to a drop in demand for telecommunications satellites, which hit its financial performance, Airbus in October announced 2,500 job cuts in its defence and space division, a figure it revised downwards in December to 2,043.
- Trying to beat Boeing -
The company's forecast for 2025 remained unchanged as it said it was targeting adjusted operating profit "of approximately 7 billion euros."
Airbus said it had already felt the "impact" of 10-percent tariffs in effect since April and was "reassured, but cautious" after the agreement announced Sunday between the United States and the European Union reestablishing a zero-tariff regime for aeronautics.
Asked whether President Donald Trump's support for Boeing, its main competitor, could disadvantage Airbus, Faury said: "Knowing that Boeing benefits from this extremely powerful political support, it forces us to be even better."
The US behemoth, which has suffered several crises, is now "in a stabilisation phase", according to its CEO, Kelly Ortberg, and reported better-than-expected results on Tuesday.
F.Ramirez--AT