Bombardier to Sell Assets, Cut 5,000 Jobs in Restructuring--2nd Update
November 08 2018 - 10:50AM
Dow Jones News
By Robert Wall and Colin Kellaher
The shake up of Bombardier Inc., a Canadian plane and train
maker, gained pace Thursday with the company announcing another
5,000 job cuts and a decision to shed its turboprop plane-making
and pilot-training units.
Bombardier has been under financial pressure for several years
after a big bet to battle plane-making giants Boeing Co. and Airbus
SE with a brand-new single-aisle jetliner ran into trouble.
The Montreal-based company said Thursday it would sell its
business aircraft-training activities to CAE Inc. for $645 million.
CAE said it agreed to pay an additional $155 million to Bombardier
to monetize future royalty obligations under an authorized
training-provider agreement.
Bombardier also said it agreed to sell for about $300 million
its turboprop-aircraft programs and the "de Havilland" trademark to
a unit of Longview Aviation Capital Corp., the parent of Canadian
aircraft-maker Viking Air Ltd. The deal includes the Dash 8 Series
100, 200 and 300, along with the Q400 program operations at the
Downsview manufacturing plant in Ontario.
The deals leave Bombardier, which once had ambitions to become a
global aerospace powerhouse, as a maker of private jets, regional
jetliners, plane parts and trains.
Founded in 1937, Bombardier in 2008 embarked on the CSeries to
rival Boeing's best-selling 737 and the equally popular Airbus
A320. Bombardier tried to sway buyers with a brand new, more
fuel-efficient design. But airliner buyers were reluctant to order
the plane, uncertain about its prospects. Technical setbacks caused
development costs to skyrocket.
The company in 2015 gave up almost half its stake in the
program, called the CSeries, in exchange for a $1 billion financial
lifeline from the Quebec government.
But the financial situation failed to improve. Bombardier in
February 2016 announced plans to cut about 7,000 jobs. Little more
than six months later, it was forced to shed a further 7,500
positions.
The CSeries entered service that year. And Delta Air Lines Inc.
agreed to place a landmark 75 plane order for the Bombardier plane.
Boeing challenged the deal, accusing its Canadian rival of price
dumping. Although Bombardier prevailed in legal challenges early
this year, the trade battle during which the U.S. threatened the
CSeries with massive important tariffs created additional
uncertainty over the project.
A year later, Bombardier agreed to hand control of the CSeries
program to Airbus. The plane maker based in Toulouse, France,
formally took charge of the project in July, quickly renaming the
jet family the A220. Bombardier, which holds a 31% stake in the
partnership, agreed to cover losses on the program until around
2021.
Airbus quickly secured deals for the A220 from JetBlue Airways
Corp. and a 60-plane order from a startup carrier being set up by
JetBlue founder David Neeleman.
Bombardier said the latest round of job cuts should take place
during the next 12 to 18 months and result in annualized savings of
about $250 million by 2021. Bombardier says it has around 69,500
employees world-wide. The company said it would post a
restructuring charge of roughly $250 million in 2019.
Bombardier Chief Executive Alain Bellemare said Thursday that
the company now had greater financial flexibility and solid
liquidity.
Write to Robert Wall at robert.wall@wsj.com and Colin Kellaher
at colin.kellaher@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 08, 2018 10:35 ET (15:35 GMT)
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