Airbus

Airbus Articles

The second quarter of 2016 may indicate that Airbus has brightened its prospects for the second half of the year. But it's not a slam dunk.
Among those new order announcements that poured out of the recent Farnborough Airshow was a below-the-radar switch that deserves a closer look.
Rockwell Collins reported mixed third-quarter fiscal 2016 results before markets opened Monday morning.
Last week, a Boeing KC-46A tanker successfully passed 1,500 pounds of fuel to an A-10 Warthog, clearing a major milestone in the program.
The saga of the new U.S. Air Force tanker is now about 15 years old and the service has yet to receive one new plane. When Boeing reports second-quarter earnings later this month, we are likely to...
After two days of multiple announcements of orders for new airplanes at the Farnborough Airshow in Britain, Wednesday morning seemed a bit calmer.
To say that aircraft makers Airbus and Boeing are rolling in new orders at the U.K.'s Farnborough Airshow is not entirely accurate.
The first day of the Farnborough Airshow has turned out to be quite kind to the world's two makers of large airplanes.
At the Farnborough Airshow, Boeing announced two potential purchases of 30 aircraft each and released its latest 20-year market forecast.
The Farnborough Airshow officially opens Monday, July 11, and the buzz centers less on new commercial aircraft orders than on the first appearance of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jet.
The Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) has a problem. It’s called the Airbus A321neo, the aircraft that Airbus Group SE is positioning as the solution to demand for a so-called “middle-of-the-market” (MOM)...
The Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) is reportedly considering a stretched version of its yet-to-delivered 777X to compete with the Airbus Group SE’s A380 double-decked, superjumbo jet. A report Wednesday...
Saying that it had signed an order with Iran Air "under authorizations from the U.S. government," Boeing confirmed that the Iranian airline intends to buy planes from the U.S. maker.
Back in January, Airbus announced an agreement with Iran's flag carrier, Iran Air, for 118 new aircraft. A similar deal between Iran Air and Boeing is expected to be announced shortly.
The first quarter was truly awful for Airbus, but the European airframe maker said Tuesday morning that it delivered 57 planes in May.