Bombardier profit takes off with pricier jet deliveries

Reuters

Published Apr 27, 2023 07:00AM ET

Updated Apr 27, 2023 10:16AM ET

By Allison Lampert and Anandita Mehrotra

MONTREAL (Reuters) -Business jet maker Bombardier (OTC:BDRBF) Inc said on Thursday it had swung to a first-quarter adjusted profit, helped by increased deliveries of its pricier planes.

Bombardier also reported improved operating margins and a 17% rise in quarterly revenue to $1.5 billion on more deliveries of medium and large-cabin corporate jets, and demand for aftermarket services.

However, the Canadian company reported negative $247 million in free cash usage, a closely watched metric, partly due to higher working capital needs to deliver more than 138 planes this year, up from 123 in 2022.

Like U.S. rival General Dynamics Corp (NYSE:GD)'s Gulfstream which reported on Wednesday, Bombardier saw a temporary pause in orders around the end of March after a U.S regional banking crisis.

Activity has since returned to normal and demand is stable Chief Executive Eric Martel told analysts. Bombardier's $14.8 billion backlog is flat since the end of 2022.

"The regional banking crisis had an impact probably for two to three weeks on us," Martel said.

Earlier, Cessna business jet maker Textron Inc (NYSE:TXT). reported higher profit on stronger pricing.

Business jet makers are planning to deliver more planes this year, despite concerns over supply chain snarls, after a surge in demand to fly private during the COVID-19 pandemic.

But those early gains in private traffic are diminishing compared with 2019, business aviation research consultancy WingX said in a Thursday note, as economic shadows loom.

"We're ready for it if it happens," Martel said of the prospect of an economic downturn.

Bombardier reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.06. Analysts on average were expecting an EPS loss of four cents a share, Refinitiv data showed.