After betting its future on Boeing, jetmaker Embraer scrambles for elusive plan B

FAN Editor
Air Astana Embraer E190-E2 aircraft with a snow leopard livery is seen at Almaty International Airport
FILE PHOTO: Air Astana Embraer E190-E2 aircraft with a snow leopard livery is seen at Almaty International Airport, Kazakhstan January 21, 2020. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheyev

April 26, 2020

By Marcelo Rochabrun, Tim Hepher and Rodrigo Viga Gaier

SAO PAULO/PARIS (Reuters) – Brazilian planemaker Embraer SA <EMBR3.SA> has been thrust into an uncertain future with no immediate plan B, while not ruling out seeking a bailout after Boeing Co <BA.N> jettisoned a $4.2 billion commercial aerospace tie-up amid the coronavirus crisis.

The company’s shell-shocked chief executive, in the job for a year with little aerospace experience, sought to rally staff after the board held late-night talks to review the collapse of plans for surviving mounting aerospace competition.

“Our history is full of difficult moments, and we have overcome all of them,” Francisco Gomes Neto told Embraer’s 20,000 staff before giving them a thumbs up.

But Embraer now faces a historic crisis with its isolation reinforced by the breakup – two years after Europe’s Airbus <AIR.PA> absorbed Embraer’s main competitor, the Canadian-designed A220.

“For Embraer, it could be very damaging,” said Teal Group consultant Richard Aboulafia, noting it was the only significant independent jetmaker.

“It’s hard to pressure your suppliers when the volume you’re offering is a fraction of your competition’s”.

Embraer’s immediate aim is to reassure investors. It pledged cost savings and said it had solid liquidity.

It also tore up arguments previously used to persuade unions and regulators to back the deal, saying it could survive without Boeing rather than stating the deal would be its “salvation”.

The former state-owned company has not asked for a bailout but says it is open to “complementary” sources of financing.

Brazilian companies, including airlines and automakers, are in bailout discussions.

Embraer “will need strong government support to recover the (separation) expenses and recover from the economic crisis caused by coronavirus,” said Aurelio Valporto, who heads minority shareholder group Abradin and opposed the deal.

Embraer had two main pitches for investors that have now vanished.

First, it would pay $1.6 billion in dividends from the sale. Second, it would receive enough cash to wipe debts clean and rejuvenate defense and executive-jet units. As a revamped company, Embraer would get a fresh start.

Executives also hoped Boeing’s marketing would be a silver bullet for the commercial arm, to be 80%-owned by Boeing.

Instead, Embraer now has a crisis committee that meets daily and no end in sight for its troubles.

That, analysts say, could not come at a worse time.

Sales of its E2 have lagged. Overall jet demand has vanished due to coronavirus. Now, crashing oil prices have further weakened the case for new jets, sold mainly on fuel efficiency.

CHINA WILD CARD

Questions have also been raised over how long high-profile Embraer jetliner CEO John Slattery, who aggressively marketed the E2 jet while lobbying for regulatory approval, will stay without the deal. He did not respond to a request to comment.

In a Twitter post, he said, “Despite this uncertain period in our industry, I’m confident Embraer will emerge stronger.”

On the positive side, analysts expect demand for small jets like the A220 or Embraer’s E2 to lead any future rebound.

The breakup may also spark a distracting legal battle.

In Brazil, alarm bells rang when Boeing lawyers began quizzing Brazilian counterparts on paperwork in recent weeks.

Industry sources said Boeing needed room to maneuver as it seeks U.S. government support for the U.S. aerospace industry. With the crisis expected to resurrect economic barriers, it was seen in a corner over moves to acquire thousands of Brazilian engineers while drawing up plans to lay off its own staff.

“You can’t easily go to Congress and ask for support and spend the money on an acquisition,” a senior source said.

Embraer says Boeing scuppered the deal on technicalities because of its own financial problems. Boeing says it pulled out only because Embraer failed to meet conditions. But the row itself could be damaging.

“Since it came apart in such vitriolic fashion, it’s hard to believe they can pick up the pieces and try again,” Jerrold Lundquist, managing director of The Lundquist Group, said.

That leaves limited options for Embraer though none has been discussed as a serious plan B.

One potential wild card is China, which almost beat Airbus to the A220 program and which remains on the hunt for ways of accelerating its own aerospace ambitions.

“From a strategic point of view, it is an option but it could be politically problematic,” Lundquist said.

Members of the inner circle of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro have repeatedly attacked China over coronavirus.

The breakup also leaves uncertainty for Embraer employees, many of whom were expected to work on future Boeing programs.

Embraer had already furloughed more than 90% of its main Brazil plant due to the crisis.

It had also spent $30 million on a new headquarters as it prepared to carve out the commercial unit.

“Our teams were working together, deciding things together. There were thousands of people working on joint decisions, all for it to end this way,” a person close to the discussions said.

(Reporting by Marcelo Rochabrun in Sao Paulo, Tim Hepher in Paris and Rodrigo Viga Gaier in Rio de Janeiro; Additional reporting by Tatiana Bautzer in Sao Paulo; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

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