Airbus seals second A350F sale with CMA CGM’s four-plane deal

Bloomberg

Airbus SE secured the second order for its coming A350 freighter, reaching an outline agreement with French shipping firm CMA CGM Group covering four of the wide-body twinjets.
The memorandum of understanding is expected to be finalised over coming weeks, according to a statement. It follows a separate deal for seven A350Fs reached with leasing giant Air Lease Corp at the Dubai Airshow.
The follow-up gives the new model sales momentum as Airbus tries to chip away at Boeing Co’s dominance in the freighter market. The European planemaker launched the A350F in July, stealing a march on its US rival, which is preparing to introduce an all-cargo version of its planned 777x wide-body.
Bloomberg reported earlier on the new A350F sale.
CMA CGM will have a total of 11 planes in its fast-growing air-cargo fleet once all deliveries come in. The French container shipping specialist is among a handful of large firms in the sector that are moving aggressively into logistics to capitalise on surging rates for air freight.
In September, Marseille-based CMA CGM ordered two current-generation Boeing 777s slated to be delivered next year.
It started its air-freight unit in March with four smaller Airbus A330-200F aircraft, and is converting another of the type from passenger use.
Danish shipping giant Maersk ordered two 777 freighters this month.
Shares of Airbus fell 3.4% in Paris amid a sell-off in travel stocks tied to Covid-19 lockdowns and rising infection rates in Europe. Boeing was off 4.3%, on reports of further issues with 787 Dreamliner production.
Both Airbus, based in Toulouse, France, and Chicago-based Boeing were hunting for freighter orders in Dubai, with sales executives schmoozing the same small circle of potential buyers. Airbus is the only one to get order commitments so far.
Airbus plans to aggressively pursue its rival’s dominance in the freighter market. The company got board approval to launch the A350F in late July and opted to move ahead without customers lined up, while continuing to woo potential targets.
The planemaker plans to bring the jet into service by 2025 and those briefed on it say it has a 109-ton payload and the range to cruise the Pacific Ocean.

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