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2017 Paris Air Show produces an unexpected flurry of ordering. Lessor purchasers were prominent

Analysis

After a slow period for ordering during early 2017 and a muted sales outlook from manufacturers, expectations for the 2017 edition of the Paris Air Show were muted. However, the event proved to be far busier than anticipated. Deals covering almost 1,200 aircraft were announced, making Paris the busiest air show since 2013.

Boeing led the ordering honours by a wide margin, capturing agreements for a total of 754 aircraft. The US manufacturer managed to beat its European rival decisively on home turf.

Airbus typically pulls out the stops for high profile air show events and leaves with top honours. However, the company announced deals for just 346 aircraft - a better than expected total, but this was cold comfort measured against Boeing's total.

Most of the activity was for the large manufacturers

Compared to the large aircraft makers, the smaller regional manufacturers had a quiet air show. Bombardier, Embraer and ATR came away with combined deals for a bare 89 aircraft, with orders for just 30 next generation types. While regional aircraft generated less than 10% of total orders at the air show, ordering for smaller jets and turboprops was significantly up from Farnborough 2016.

Outside the five established Western manufacturers, the rest of the players in the commercial aircraft sector left Paris completely empty handed. Mitsubishi, ANTONOV, COMAC and UAC all have new or in-development aircraft, but were unable to announce a sale.

However, China's COMAC did arrive at Paris having just sealed a deal with EverBright Financial Leasing for 30 C919s, taking the total order and commitments total past 600 in the process.

Annual Paris & Farnborough air show orders and commitments

Narrowbodies dominated, and the 737 MAX 10 becomes an instant hit

Narrowbody ordering led the way at Paris in 2017, with firm orders, MoUs, and other commitments for more than 900 aircraft announced. Of these, 850 were for the new 737 MAX and A320neo, showing that despite a combined order book of better than nearly 8800 aircraft, the updated narrowbodies are as popular as ever.

Boeing formally launched the 737 MAX 10 on the first day of the air show, and the aircraft was instantly success. Boeing snagged orders and commitments for 361 MAX 10 aircraft, from a diverse mix of 16 customers.

Boeing 2017 Paris Air Show orders, commitments and conversions

Customer

737-800

737 MAX

MAX 7

MAX 8

MAX 10

787-8

787-9

777-300ER

777F

BOC Aviation

10

GECAS

20

CDB Aviation

42

CDB Aviation

10

CDB Aviation

8

TUI Group

18

Tibet Finance

10

Tibet Finance

10

SpiceJet

20

SpiceJet

20

AerCap

30

ALAFCO

20

Lion Air

20

Air Capital Group

20

Okay Airways

5

Okay Airways

8

Okay Airways

7

Avolon

75

Ryanair

10

Azerbaijan Airlines

4

CALC

35

CALC

15

United Continental

100

United Continental

4

Japan Investment

10

Ethiopian Airlines

2

Air Lease Corp

5

Air Lease Corp

7

El Al

1

Donghai Airlines

10

Malaysia Airlines

10

Xiamen Airlines

10

Copa Airlines

15

Unidentified airline

125

AerCap

15

Ruili

20

Tassili Airlines

3

Total

754

The newest and largest version of the MAX family is a reaction to Airbus' domination of the upper end of the narrowbody segment, with the 220- to 240-seat A321neo heavily outselling the 218-seat 737 MAX 9.

The 737 MAX 10 competitive response is a (not completely straightforward) stretch of the 737 MAX 9. It adds 1.7m in length, offering an extra two rows of seating and taking maximum capacity to 230 seats, at the expense of 300nm in range and some landing gear commonality with the rest of the MAX family. The design narrows some of the gap to the A321neo, but it still falls mildly short of its competitor in terms of seats, and there is a range issue.

Major air show orders for the MAX 10 included 100 from United Continental, 50 from Lion Air Group, 40 from SpiceJet, 20 from GECAS and 18 from TUI Group. However, some of the gloss comes off the headline order figure, since 208 of the 361 MAX 10 deals were conversions from other versions of the 737 MAX family already in Boeing's order book.

Will the MAX 10 undermine Boeing's other sales?

Airbus was quick to jump on this, claiming that the 737 MAX 10 will "cannibalise" the 737 MAX family, particularly the 737 MAX 9. Boeing maintains that the "heart" of the narrowbody market are the 737 MAX 8 and 737 MAX 9, while Airbus expects the A321 to take potentially up to half of future narrowbody sales. So far, the A321neo has accounted for just under 30% of all A320neo sales (up from 22% of A320ceo sales).

A320ceo/A320neo family sales breakdown by variant

For Airbus, narrowbody sales also dominated. The manufacturer announced deals for 331 A320 family aircraft, including a deal for 100 A320neos with GECAS, and 45 with CBD Leasing (which includes 15 conversions from A320neo to the larger A321neo).

The old A320ceo proved surprisingly popular, with orders placed for 49 aircraft.

Airbus 2017 Paris Air Show orders, commitments and conversions

Customer

A320ceo

A320neo

A321ceo

A321neo

A330-200

A330-900

A350-900

GECAS

100

Viva Air

15

35

Ethiopian Airlines

10

Wizz Air

10

AirAsia

14

Air Lease Corp

12

CDB Aviation Lease Finance

30

15

Delta Air Lines

10

Hi Fly

2

Zagros Airlines

20

8

Iran Air Tour

45

Tibet Finance Leasing

20

Total

346

The popularity of the older generation of widebodies was confirmed by GE Aviation CEO David Joyce, who reported at Paris that OEMs have requested that CFM International reduce the pace of the ramp down of production on the CFM56 engine, which powers both the A320ceo and the 737 NG. According to Mr Joyce, this will mean CFM will produce an extra 800 engines between 2018 and 2020.

Widebody ordering starts to show some positive developments

Large widebody orders have been slow in the past few years, but some developments at Paris indicated that a minor recovery may be under way.

Both Airbus and Boeing have publicly stated they don't expect a recovery in widebody ordering until 2020 to 2022, when a wave of replacement demand arrives, so the total of 66 widebody orders is encouraging for some programmes that are under pressure.

Boeing took the lion's share of these, leading with a deal for 30 787-9s from AerCap. CDB Aviation Lease Finance placed orders for a further eight. Boeing also made some progress in closing its 777X production gap, grabbing order for four 777-300ERs from United, and for two 777Fs from Ethiopian Airlines.

Airbus managed 12 orders, 10 coming from Ethiopian Airlines for 10 A350-900s. A Portuguese wet-lease specialist chipped in with an order for two A330-200s, its first direct acquisition from an OEM.

Boeing teases with the New Midsized Aircraft and Airbus puts winglets on the A380

At Paris Boeing fed speculation that it will go ahead with its 'New Midsized Aircraft', designed to service medium haul markets and acting as a spiritual successor to the 757. Boeing Commercial Airplanes VP and GM of airplane development Mike Delaney stated that a firm design for the aircraft could be settled by 2020, with testing to start by 2024.

Boeing believes an aircraft of 220 to 270 seats, with range of up to 5,000nm, could do for new medium haul routes what the 787 did for long haul flights - allowing carriers to connect direct to secondary cities, ignoring overcrowded major hubs. The key for Boeing will be to ensure the aircraft doesn't eat into the market space occupied by the 737 MAX 10 at the lower end of the capacity/range spectrum, and the 787-8 at the upper end.

While Boeing teased about a new design, Airbus came to the air show spruiking a refined version of the A380, dubbed the A380plus. The upgrade would add large winglets, 80 extra seats, more range and better MRO cost control, but will only go ahead with a large order underneath it.

Apart from another order from the A380 stalwart, Emirates, the prospects for the aircraft look sparse. It has been better than 12 months since the last order, and Airbus is reportedly close to placing the programme on life support, potentially lowering output to less than one aircraft per month in 2019. The A380's backlog sits at just over 100 aircraft, and parts of the order book look decidedly shaky.

Reports of the death of very large category passenger aircraft were reinforced by Boeing, which omitted the four engine very large aircraft category from sales projections under its latest 20 year outlook. Boeing still has confidence in a home for very large aircraft as freighters, but according to Boeing Commercial Airplanes VP marketing Randy Tinseth, the 350- to 415-seat 777X family will be the "biggest airplane in the market moving forward".

Regional aircraft makers enjoy a new run of orders

Turboprops enjoyed a steady air show, with SpiceJet committing to 25 Q400s, Philippine Airlines adding seven more Q400s, and ATR winning a collection of small orders for a total of 17 aircraft.

Regional jet sales were all collected by Embraer, which won orders/commitments for 30 of its new E-Jets E2 family, as well as orders for eight of the current generation E-Jets. This was a much needed boost for the Brazilian company, after securing just seven other orders in the first six months of the year.

Bombardier failed to win any regional jet orders, with the C Series again notably absent from the air show order list. Even so, confidence in the programme remains high at Bombardier, with praise for operation aircraft coming from launch customers SWISS and airBaltic. Bombardier has enjoyed a better year for the CRJ, collecting 27 orders/commitments prior to the air show.

Regional aircraft manufacturers 2017 Paris Air Show orders and commitments

Bombardier

Q400

Customer:

CemAir

2

SpiceJet

25

Philippine Airlines

7

Total

34

34

ATR

ATR 42-600

ATR 72-600

Customer:

Braathens Regional Airlines

1

Air Tahiti

1

Shaanxi Tianju Investment Group

10

Xuzhou Hantong Aviation

3

Air Senegal

2

Total

17

17

Embraer

E175

E190

E195

E190-E2

E195-E2

Customer:

Fuji Dream Airlines

3

Undisclosed customer

10

Undisclosed customer

20

KLM Cityhopper

2

Japan Airlines

1

Belavia Belarusian Airlines

1

Belavia Belarusian Airlines

1

Total

38

38

Lessors come back to the fore

Leasing companies had a very quiet 2017 until the air show, announcing orders for just 14 Airbus aircraft, three Boeing aircraft, and none with the regional aircraft makers. However, lessors made up for lost time at Paris, placing orders for 449 aircraft, including 182 aircraft with Airbus (53% of deals) and 267 aircraft with Boeing (35%).

The standout was GECAS, which ordered 100 A320neo aircraft and then followed this up with orders for 20 737 MAX 10. CDB Aviation Lease Finance also ordered a mix of 105 aircraft, including 52 737 MAX and 8 787s, as well as 45 A320neo family aircraft. A new lessor, Tibet Finance Leasing, made orders for 45 aircraft from the A320neo and 737 MAX families.

Renewed ordering by lessors follows a period of intense consolidation in the industry. HNA Group acquired Avolon, which in turn purchased CIT Leasing Group earlier in 2017, creating the world's third largest leasing group. DAE has also announced it will acquire AWAS, creating a new leasing powerhouse with a fleet of close to 400 aircraft. In addition, there has been rapid portfolio turnover and a slowdown in sale and leaseback activity, prompting lessors to start making orders again.

Strong air show underlines industry health and strong traffic outlook

The stronger than expected ordering at Paris 2017 underlines the robust health of the airline industry, and the aircraft manufacturing industry along with it.

Regional ups and downs and one off events mean the airline industry is not uniformly well off, but the industry's underlying fundamentals remain strong.

Paris 2017 is a reminder that demand for air travel remains strong, industry profits continue at near record levels, and orders for commercial airliners are only going to continue to grow.

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