Vistara in talks with Airbus, Boeing for $8.5 billion jet deal

epa04416793 The new Airbus A320neo aircraft taxis after landing from its first flight from the airport of Toulouse-Blagnac, southern France, 25 September 2014. The roll-out of the first A320neo - according to Airbus - marks another stage in the development of the Airbus aircraft family. The A320neo, which stands for 'new engine option', is a modernized version of the A320 featuring and optimized wingline with so-called 'sharklets' and modified engine hoisting that should bring a 15 percent lesser fuel consumption. Besides the A320neo there a also plans to build the smaller A319 and the bigger A321 as neo-version.  EPA/GUILLAUME HORCAJUELO

Bloomberg

Vistara, the Indian affiliate of Singapore Airlines Ltd., is in talks with Airbus SE and Boeing Co. to buy jets worth as much as $8.5 billion as the carrier seeks to tap India’s growing middle class, according to people familiar with the plans.
Vistara, a joint venture with majority owner Tata Group, is seeking to buy about 50 narrowbody jets, typically used for shorter routes, and up to 10 widebodies, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing private negotiations. A final decision is likely by June, one of the people said.
A representative for Vistara declined to comment, adding the carrier will share its fleet expansion strategy at an appropriate time.
An Airbus spokesman said the company’s discussions with customers are confidential. A Boeing spokesman declined to comment.
The order is the first of several expected aircraft deals Indian carriers are set to place in the coming months, as carriers expand in the world’s fastest growing major aviation market. Budget operators IndiGo, run by InterGlobe Aviation Ltd., and SpiceJet Ltd. are now exploring the low-cost, long-haul model, which would need widebody aircraft on top of the more than 500 single-aisle jets already on order from them. Jet Airways India Ltd. is also in talks to buy as many as 100 narrowbody jets.
At the Singapore Airshow this week, Airbus and Boeing are pitching their new fuel-efficient aircraft to help airlines counter rising oil prices. After years of ordering planes, Gulf carriers have slowed down, with the focus shifting to Asia. Asia Pacific is likely to have 3.5 billion passengers by 2036, adding more than double the forecast for North America and Europe combined, according to estimates by the International Air Transport Association. To meet that demand, Boeing estimates carriers will need 16,050 new aircraft valued at $2.5 trillion by 2036.
For Vistara, the new jets would enable expansion to destinations including to New York and London and allow it to utilise yet-untapped bilateral agreements between India and its neighboring states.
The carrier, 49 percent owned by Singapore Air, offers premium services in three classes. It wants to bolster its foothold in what will be the world’s third-biggest air travel market by 2030.

Max Vs Neo
Competition on the smaller aircraft pits the Airbus A320neo against Boeing’s 737Max, the people said. On the larger planes, Airbus’s A330neos are vying with Boeing’s 787 Dreamliners, the people said.
Manufacturing capacity could affect Airbus’s prospects for the single-aisle order if the European planemaker weren’t able to deliver the planes in time, according to the people. One option under consideration is for Vistara to lease jets from other companies initially, one person said.
Airbus’s new sales chief Eric Schulz said in Singapore that the order book for its narrowbodies is “forcing” the planemaker to look at how it can raise production rates for the
A320 above the 60 planes a month target by mid-2019. He added that he’s confident that suppliers, already under pressure to meet the existing ramp up, will be able to cope with
any increase.
Vistara competes with struggling state-owned Air India. Adding planes and routes would allow it to also challenge other carriers, which have used their hubs to lure Indians travelling to Europe and North America.
Tata Group established Vistara in 2015 after an earlier attempt by the two partners in the mid-1990s to forge an airline failed. The full-service carrier plans to use its hub in New Delhi to transfer traffic.

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