Bombardier downgraded by Goldman Sachs over CSeries delay - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 05:43 AM | Calgary | -12.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Bombardier downgraded by Goldman Sachs over CSeries delay

Further delays expected in the delivery of Bombardier's new CSeries commercial jetliner and the loss of an initial buyer led analyst Goldman Sachs to downgrade its assessment on the company.
The delay and added costs of Bombardier's CSeries jet could weigh on the company for years, a Goldman Sachs analyst predicted. (Bombardier)

Further delays expected in the delivery of Bombardier's new CSeries commercial jetliner and the loss of an initial buyer led analyst Goldman Sachs to downgrade its assessment on the company.

The New York investment houseurged investors sell the Montreal-based transportation company's shares.

The CSeries' flight test program has been grounded for more than three months since an engine failure and Swedish company Braathens Aviation (Malmo) disclosed last week that it will no longer be the aircraft's launch operator. In 2011, it had placed an order for five CS100 planes and five CS300 models, for a total amount of $655 million, with options for additional planes.

Analyst Noah Poponak says it is "inevitable" that there will be further delays with the aircraft's launch planned for the second half of next year.

Several years of pain

The New York analyst anticipates the 110- to 160-seat plane will "negatively impact" Bombardier'sfinancial results and create "negative catalysts" for several years.

Poponak says Bombardier will not likely be able to dramatically pick up the pace of flight tests to about 160 hours per month, from 37 hours before the program was grounded, to meet its delivery deadline.

But Canaccord Genuity sees promise in Bombardier, expecting "significant" earnings growth in the coming years from new aircraft launches, margin improvements at aerospace and transportation from restructuring, higher demand for some aircraft and the lower Canadian dollar.