Ryanair, Boeing's biggest European customer, said it could delay deliveries of some 737 MAX aircraft as it holds out for a trade deal between the U.S. and the European Union.
The airline, Europe's biggest by passenger numbers, said it doesn't urgently need jets due to be delivered through October, leaving it room to defer the orders and wait for an EU-U.S. agreement. Chief Executive Michael O'Leary said he expects any deal to include a carve out for commercial aerospace.
While the EU has weighed imposing duties on U.S. goods, including Boeing jets, O'Leary said he thought long-lasting tariffs were unlikely. "To the extent that they're imposed, I think they will be short-lived," he said.
Ryanair has a fixed price contract with Boeing, meaning the plane maker would be on the hook for any duties, O'Leary said. Ryanair would try to help ease the burden, he said, including by taking delivery of aircraft through its tariff-exempt U.K. subsidiary.
O'Leary spoke to analysts after Ryanair reported quarterly net profit of 819 million euros, equivalent to $952 million, more than double a year earlier. Shares rose over 5% in Europe and the U.S.
Excerpt from WSJ
Read the full article