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Airbus takes new €1.3bn hit on A400M troop carrier

Airbus has taken a €1.3bn (£1.2bn) charge on its troubled A400M military transport plane, bringing total charges on the project to more than €8bn.

The A400M has had setbacks over the years, most seriously a crash during a test flight in Spain in 2015 which led to the deaths of the four crew members.

The aerospace group reported better-than-expected 2017 profits of €4.3bn, against €3.9bn in 2016.

Shares in the company rose by about 8% after the results were published.

Revenues were "stable" at €66.8bn, up from €66.6bn.

In its statement, Airbus said higher aircraft deliveries had been "offset by a reduction in revenues of around €2bn from the perimeter changes".

Last week, Airbus reached a provisional agreement with seven European NATO buyer countries over further delays in deliveries for the A400M.

Airbus chief executive Tom Ender said on a conference: "We have been in permanent crisis management for the last two or three years."

He said in the results statement: "On A400M, we made progress on the industrial and capabilities front and agreed a re-baselining with government customers which will significantly reduce the remaining programme risks. This is reflected in a substantial one-off charge."

Airbus said it expected to deliver about 800 commercial aircraft in 2018 if engine manufacturers met their commitments.

If it does hit those delivery targets, it said it would see profits increase by about 20% this year.

Last month the Emirates airline announced an order for up to 36 Airbus A380s.

The $16bn (£11.5bn) deal was effectively a reprieve for the A380 after Airbus threatened to stop making the jet if it could strike a deal with Emirates.

In its results statement Airbus said Emirates Airline's latest order provided "increased visibility on the A380 programme for the years to come".

 

Analysis: Theo Leggett, business reporter

The A400M was meant to be the flagship of Airbus' military fleet - but the programme has been dogged by seemimgly endless delays, technical problems and what the chief executive, Tom Enders, has described as a 'flawed contractual setup".

As a result, the heavy-lifter has ended up being a financial deadweight on the company. The new write off of € 1.3bn takes the total so far to more than €8bn.

That isn't the only issue causing concern. The company is the subject of ongoing corruption investigations in both the UK and France, over its use of intermediaries in major aircraft deals; it now seems the US authorities are taking an interest as well.

With the chief operating officer, Fabrice Bregier, stepping down and the top salesman, John Leahy retiring, the company is already in a state of management flux - and Tom Enders is also due to leave next year.

But, on the plus side, Airbus' order book is still full to bursting. It has even managed to log a new order for the troubled A380 superjumbo - enough to keep the production line going for another decade. And profits are rising. So it isn't all bad news - far from it.

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