Airbus will pay Spirit $439M for the sites and provide $200M in credit lines. Airbus agreed to acquire some Spirit AeroSystems facilities that make parts for its jets, moving to take direct control of production in a bid to stabilize supply chains after months of disruption.
The companies said Monday that they had entered into a definitive deal for Airbus to take over several of Spirit’s plants in the U.S., Europe and Africa that produce fuselage sections and other components for Airbus’s commercial aircraft.
Spirit, which split off from Boeing BA 3.18%increase; green up pointing triangle about two decades ago, has been at the center of quality issues affecting 737 MAX jets. Spirit made the fuselage involved in last year’s Alaska Airlines emergency landing.
The deal with Airbus comes months after U.S. rival Boeing struck a roughly $4.7 billion agreement to acquire the Kansas-based jet-parts maker, including most Boeing-related commercial operations as well as additional commercial, defense and aftermarket operations.
Airbus Chief Executive Guillaume Faury told shareholders at the company’s annual general meeting earlier this month that supply-chain hurdles, particularly with Spirit, were putting pressure on plans to ramp up production of its A220 narrow-body and A350 wide-body aircraft. Airbus was forced to delay the entry into service of the A350 freighter variant to the second half of 2027 from 2026 previously.
Excerpt from WSJ
Read the full article