Demand for Gulfstream’s flagship G650 and G650ER recovered
dramatically in the fourth quarter, with parent company General Dynamics
reporting a 78% year-over-year jump in new orders for the ultra-long-range,
large cabin jet, says chief executive Phoebe Novakovic.
The growth in orders represented the second best
quarter for the models since Gulfstream launched the product line in 2008 and
prompted Novakovic to express new optimism for the large cabin sector in 2018
amidst a projected global economic growth spurt.
“My sense is that order activity and customer
interest are picking up across the industry,” Novakovic told analysts on a
fourth quarter earnings call on 24 January.
The potential shift in demand comes at a critical
time for the Savannah, Georgia-based Gulfstream. The company delivered the last
G450 in mid-January, ending a 30-year production for the GIV product line. The
G550 has slowed to a minimum annual production rate. Meanwhile, Gulfstreamplans to deliver the G500 and G600 later this year, as the larger and
longer-range G650 increases in demand.
As demand for the G650 rebounds after a two-year
lull, Gulfstream will have new pricing power. That should help offset a
contraction in operating margins as Gulfstream introduces the first production
lots of the G500 and G600.
“As we get the first lot of the 500 and 600 out at
the production line and we improve our learning, which we have done
historically and I’m confident we will do again, then we will eventually see
margin expansion,” Novakovic says.
Gulfstream delivered 94 large cabin aircraft and 27
mid-cabin aircraft in 2017, exceeding the large cabin result in 2016 by six
aircraft and matching the mid-cabin total.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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