Airbus announces the acquisition of certain activities of Spirit Aerosystems

The European aircraft manufacturer says it has reached an agreement with the American equipment supplier “concerning the potential acquisition of major activities linked to Airbus”.

Airbus will buy certain activities essential to several of its aircraft programs from the American equipment manufacturer Spirit Aerosystems, in the process of being reintegrated by Boeing, the European giant announced on Monday.

“Airbus has entered into a binding agreement with Spirit AeroSystems for the potential acquisition of major Airbus-related businesses,” said the European aircraft manufacturer, which will be “compensated by Spirit AeroSystems to the tune of $559 million, for a nominal consideration of $1.00, subject to adjustments, including based on the final scope of the transaction.”

“Ensuring the stability of supply”

Boeing is by far Spirit’s largest customer, 60% of whose revenues came from the American aircraft manufacturer in 2022. But the equipment manufacturer is also a strategic supplier to its competitor Airbus. On Monday morning, Boeing confirmed that it was buying Spirit’s activities – excluding those sold to Airbus – for $4.7 billion. The total amount of the transaction amounts to $8.3 billion including debt.

The acquisition envisaged by Airbus, subject to a due diligence process by the struggling equipment manufacturer, would thus concern “major activities linked to Airbus”, according to the European group. It would notably concern the production of fuselage sections of the A350 located in Kinston (North Carolina) and Saint-Nazaire (France), wings and the central fuselage of the A220 in Belfast (Northern Ireland) and Casablanca (Morocco), as well as pylons of the A220 in Wichita (Kansas).

“With this agreement, Airbus intends to ensure the stability of the supply of its commercial aircraft programs through a more sustainable evolution, both operationally and financially, of the various Airbus work packages for which Spirit AeroSystems is currently responsible.”

Spirit AeroSystems sous surveillance

Launched into an outsourcing policy to retain only the final assembly of aircraft, Boeing separated in 2005 from its factory in Wichita (Kansas), specializing in aerostructures, giving birth to Spirit Aerosystems. The company has since diversified its customers and grown through acquisitions. In difficulty due to recurring quality and production problems, Spirit AeroSystems has been under surveillance since an incident on January 5, when a cap holder on the cabin of an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9 came loose. during the flight.

These difficulties led Boeing, itself the subject of several investigations for non-compliance issues, to announce in early March that it was considering reintegrating Spirit, which was part of the American giant until 2005. It was unthinkable for Airbus that its main competitor would become one of its strategic suppliers. Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury had thus confided in late April that he was monitoring the situation “closely”. “We do not want large work packages to be supplied by our main and only competitor,” he stressed.

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