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Boeing set to win American wide-body jet order: sources

Reuters  |  PARIS/NEW YORK 

By and Alana Wise

PARIS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - is close to winning a keenly fought contest to supply jets to , beating European competition from A330neo, three people familiar with the matter said.

The deal, which remains to be finalised, also marks a victory for , whose engines are expected to power aircraft, beating proposals from rival , they said, asking not to be identified.

"We are continuing to look at our wide-body options and are focused on making the right decision for American. No final decisions have been made at this time," an American said.

Other parties declined to comment.

Shares of closed down 2.5 percent, while shares of Boeing were up 0.4 percent.

Boeing's expected win deals a fresh blow to the struggling A330neo, weeks after dropped an order for six A330-800neo jets in favour of the 787, leaving that particular variant of long-haul A330neo with no customers.

updated its profitable series in 2014 with new engines, but after an initial foray, sales have been sluggish.

Recently appointed has made boosting A330neo sales a top priority this year.

said in January it was reviewing the and A330-900neo, which is in test flights before entering service this summer.

Industry sources had said American was looking for about 25-30 wide-body jets, making a Boeing deal potentially worth some $7-8.5 billion.

Aircraft analysts had predicted American's decision would be important for the health of the A330neo programme, because a win there could spur further sales and prevent new defections.

The latest setback is expected to trigger a scramble by to prevent the A330neo's top buyer - and one of its largest corporate customers - , changing its mind after announcing it would stick with the A330neo.

executives visited Boeing earlier this month and have said they were examining the 787.

There are also growing doubts over the fate of an order for 28 A330neo jets by IranAir, part of a deal for 100 jets, as U.S. strikes an increasingly hawkish tone over the future of an international sanctions deal.

Between them, and make up over 40 percent of the current order book for the A330neo.

Longer-term, faces deeper unease over its wide-body position in case failure to impose the A330neo leaves it over-dependent on a single model, the newer A350-900, acccording to two industry sources. insists the larger A350-1000 is also ripe for an upturn in sales after a recent calm period.

officials also say other airlines are looking at the A330neo. reported this week that the planemaker could introduce a freighter version.

UK-based meanwhile denied a report that its Trent 7000 engines, which power the A330neo, were affected by issues on the Trent 1000, which is available on the 787 and which has faced reliability problems.

(Reporting by Tim Hepher, Alana Wise; editing by and Adrian Croft)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, March 24 2018. 03:21 IST
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