Massive selling in the closing weeks of 2017 saw Airbus (AIR.PA) overhaul Boeing’s (BA.N) recent lead in the global jet market to win their annual order contest for the fifth year running, but doubts remain over the future of its flagship A380.
The European planemaker said net orders after cancellations rose 52 percent to 1,109 aircraft in 2017, placing it ahead of Boeing’s 912 neiiiiit orders. Airbus posted 1,229 gross or unadjusted orders compared with Boeing’s 1,053.
Airbus confirmed it had met its core 2017 target of more than 700 deliveries by releasing 718 jets to customers in 2017, up 4 percent from the previous year despite industrial delays.
Boeing remained the world’s largest jetmaker for the sixth year running with a record total of 763 deliveries.
Planemaking chief Fabrice Bregier said engine supplier Pratt & Whitney (UTX.N) had turned the corner on delays that had disrupted single-aisle aircraft output, and predicted close to 800 deliveries in 2018.
He predicted that a record backlog of more than 7,000 aircraft, now on order and waiting to be built, would allow Airbus to lift deliveries beyond those of Boeing in 2020.
Boeing has questioned whether all of the airplanes sold by its competitor will be delivered due to speculative business.
December’s sales breakthrough focused mainly on the bread and butter of Airbus’s portfolio, the medium-haul A320 family, which competes with Boeing’s best-selling 737 series.
Some industry sources have questioned whether Airbus was forced to slash prices in order to bring in the record harvest of more than 800 orders in December, which included the sale of 430 jets via one U.S. investor.
However, sales chief John Leahy said the surge reflected stronger than expected demand, after airlines closed the year with robust traffic data, amid rising stock markets and economic growth.
“The market is just stronger everywhere,” Leahy told reporters on a conference call.
In the wide-body or long-haul segment, by contrast, Airbus saw its market share against Boeing slump to 25 percent from 51 percent the year before, Reuters reports.
That included no new orders and two cancellations for the A380 superjumbo, whose future is under threat due to low sales. Boeing also suffered cancellations for its competing 747.
Bregier confirmed plans, first reported by Reuters, to reduce A380 production to as few as six aircraft per year, compared with 15 deliveries last year.
Airbus currently plans to lower output to eight a year.
Airbus is talking to the main A380 customer Emirates about buying about three dozen more of the planes in order to secure future production.