China Eastern sees smaller-than-expected C919 delivery this year

Reuters

Published Aug 31, 2022 10:32PM ET

Updated Sep 01, 2022 12:05AM ET

(Reuters) - China Eastern Airlines (NYSE:CEA) Corp Ltd said it expects to receive fewer C919 narrowbody planes this year than previously forecast, as it awaits certification of the local rival to the Boeing (NYSE:BA) Co 737 MAX and Airbus SE (OTC:EADSY) A320neo.

The airline said it expects to receive only one C919, manufactured by state-owned planemaker COMAC, down from the three previously forecast.

China Eastern has placed firm orders for five of the planes, and the other four deliveries are now expected in 2023, according to half-year results released this week that provided the first update to its fleet plans since its annual report released in April.

China Eastern also placed an order with Airbus for 100 of its A320neo family planes in July for delivery from 2023 to 2027, with the bulk expected from 2024.

Daiwa analyst Kevin Lau, citing a conference call with China Eastern management on Wednesday, told clients in a note that the airline was not concerned by production issues at Airbus that have delayed deliveries to airlines and lessors in recent months because it believed its large order would give it priority.

"For the C919, China Eastern will be the first global airline to put it in commercial operation," he said. "However, management added that new orders of the C919 would be subject to Airbus' capacity ramp-up."

China Eastern did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

In terms of Airbus deliveries, China Eastern's latest forecast would see it take 19 A320neo family planes this year, 16 in 2023 and 28 in 2024. That compares with its April forecast for 22 this year, 13 in 2023 and none in 2024.