Airbus could bring forward non-U.S. deliveries if Trump tariffs impede trade, CEO says

Airbus could bring forward non-U.S. deliveries if Trump tariffs impede trade, CEO says


The logo of Airbus is pictured outside the Airbus facility in Saint-Nazaire, France, November 7, 2023. 

Stephane Mahe | Reuters

Airbus could prioritize deliveries to its non-U.S. customers if tariffs disrupt the European planemaker’s imports stateside, CEO Guillaume Faury said Thursday.

“We have a large demand from the rest of the world, so [if] we face very significant difficulties to deliver to the U.S., we can also adapt by bringing forward deliveries to other customers which are very eager to get planes,” Faury told CNBC’s Charlotte Reed, in an interview discussing the company’s full-year results.

“Those tariffs are looming, and we don’t know what they will be, [and], if and when we would have tariffs come in, what they would impact. So we stand ready to adapt accordingly,” Faury said, referring to U.S. President Donald Trump’s wide-ranging tariff threats which have already been ramped up against China.

Faury nevertheless stressed that Airbus had made moves in recent years to not only buy more from the U.S. and sell a significant number of aircraft and helicopters in the U.S., but also to base part of its production locally.

That includes a large output site in Mobile, Alabama, as well as two final assembly lines for the company’s A220 and A320 family jets, with another U.S. line under construction to build A320 and A321s for the domestic market.

A host of large U.S. carriers are Airbus customers, including American Airlines, Delta, United and JetBlue.

“So we have a lot of potential flexibilities,” Faury said regarding the potential imposition of duties, whose details remain uncertain.

Trump doubles down on tariffs at FII Priority Summit in Miami

“Bottom lime, we believe in this industry — that is very much a North American ecosystem with a lot of interdependencies — tariffs would hurt both sides. So I hope, I believe, we will not be significantly impacted by tariffs,” Faury said.

The European planemaker’s target for around 820 aircraft deliveries in 2025 was issued “in spite of uncertainties, to clarify what we think we can deliver this year absent tariffs,” Faury said.

Airbus meanwhile remains stymied by a host of supply chain issues which are limiting its ability to ramp up production and work through its order backlog of more than 8,000 jets, Faury told CNBC.

His comments come after the company earlier on Thursday reported a 6% rise in annual revenue, but an 8% fall in adjusted operating profit to 5.35 billion euros ($5.59 billion) across 2024.

Profit at the company’s defense and space unit swung to a loss of 656 million euros for the full year.

Faury told CNBC that space was the “area where we are suffering,” amid competition from players such as Elon Musk’s SpaceX and past investment in technologies that had proven difficult.

“We underestimated the risk compared to the reality,” Faury said, adding that the company was restructuring the unit and working to solve existing issues.

Despite challenges, Airbus’s annual results served to highlight its strength over its crisis-hit U.S. rival Boeing, which reported an annual loss of $11.83 billion for 2024.



Source

Broadcom lands big deal for its specialty chips. Wall Street sees the stock rising as much as 80%
World

Broadcom lands big deal for its specialty chips. Wall Street sees the stock rising as much as 80%

Wall Street is buying the long-term bull case for Broadcom after the semiconductor firm deepened its relationship with Anthropic and signed a deal with Google . Under its latest agreement with Anthropic , Broadcom will supply multiple gigawatts of next-generation tensor processing unit capacity for the Claude maker’s artificial intelligence infrastructure. The semiconductor supplier also […]

Read More
Trump warns Iran’s ‘whole civilization will die tonight’ unless deal struck
World

Trump warns Iran’s ‘whole civilization will die tonight’ unless deal struck

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in James S. Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House on April 06, 2026 in Washington, DC. Alex Wong | Getty Images President Donald Trump on Tuesday sharply ramped up his threats against Iran, warning “a whole civilization will die tonight” unless the country’s leadership […]

Read More
Danone CEO flags price uncertainty as Iran war escalates: ‘Nobody knows’ how conflict will play out
World

Danone CEO flags price uncertainty as Iran war escalates: ‘Nobody knows’ how conflict will play out

A woman shops for prepared food at Eataly March 19, 2026 in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Robert Nickelsberg | Getty Images Danone’s CEO told CNBC that inflationary pressures from the Iran war may force the company to consider price hikes as the outlook for conflict in the Middle East remains highly uncertain. […]

Read More