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Safran raises profit target after nine-month sales grow 17%
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Safran raises profit target after nine-month sales grow 17%
Oct 26, 2024 10:50 PM

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Nine-month revenues grew 17.4%

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Sees full-year revenues at 27.1 billion euros

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Targets core 2024 profit of 4.1 billion euros

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Supply bottlenecks, Boeing ( BA ) strike affect LEAP engine

deliveries

(Recasts, adds CEO comments on Boeing ( BA ) strike, paragraphs 7-8)

PARIS, Oct 25 (Reuters) - French jet engine maker Safran

raised its profit forecast for the year even as supply

bottlenecks forced it to lower its revenue predictions on

Friday, buoyed by demand for profitable services on planes that

are already flying.

Disruption in industrial supply chains and an ongoing strike

at Boeing ( BA ) have worsened a shortage of new aircraft for airlines,

which are flying older planes for longer, meaning the repair

shops where engine makers make most of their money are busy.

Safran predicted a 2024 recurring operating income of around

4.1 billion euros ($4.44 billion), up from a previous target

close to 4.0 billion euros, citing a strong aftermarket so far

this year.

The French company, which co-produces LEAP engines with GE

Aerospace through their CFM joint venture, said

nine-month revenues grew 17.4% to 19.686 billion euros led by

Equipment and Defence activities and Aircraft Interiors.

Deliveries of LEAP jet engines improved in the third-quarter

but remained hampered by the limited availability of

high-pressure turbine blades, even though their production has

been rising.

Safran joined its U.S. partner in predicting 10% fewer LEAP

deliveries in 2024, compared with a previous target of flat to

5% growth, and revised down its full-year revenue target to 27.1

billion euros from 27.4 billion.

Chief Executive Olivier Andries said Boeing ( BA ) was continuing

to take and pay for deliveries of LEAP engines "for the moment"

as a strike by machinists enters its sixth week. The strike is,

however, affecting Safran's cabling business, which supplies the

Boeing 737 MAX, he said.

Andries declined to comment on deliveries of aircraft at

Airbus, which blamed delays at CFM among others for

forcing it to lower its targets earlier this year.

Airbus planemaking CEO Christian Scherer said last week that

LEAP engine supplies would continue to influence whether Airbus

was able to meet its industrial targets.

Andries said supply chains were improving but would remain

strained in 2025, and Safran would continue to purchase parts

and avoid "stop-go" patterns to soften the impact on suppliers.

Jet engines are typically sold for little or no profit at

the outset, or even at a loss, with manufacturers profiting from

services spread over the life of the engine.

Safran's widely-watched civil aftermarket revenues rose

26.2% in the first nine months, with the group targeting mid-20s

percentage growth for the full year.

Core propulsion revenues rose 11.9% over the same period.

Andries reaffirmed plans for the interiors business to break

even this year after a sharp rise in deliveries of business

class seats that have also been blamed for some plane delays.

Safran said plans by the French government to implement a

temporary increase in corporation tax could cost it 320 million

to 340 million euros in 2024. Prime Minister Michel Barnier has

announced targeted tax hikes for France's biggest companies and

wealthiest individuals to help narrow a gaping budget deficit.

($1 = 0.9243 euros)

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