Boeing braces for trade war headwinds in China

AFP  |  Zhuhai (China) 

At China's biggest air show, a top voiced hope that the US and would resume trade talks.

While has so far escaped the rounds of tit-for-tat tariffs, analysts say it is at risk of being the next victim if the trade war escalates, which would benefit its European rival

Tariffs would bite deep for the Chicago-based company as -- the world's second biggest aircraft market -- represents one-fifth of its global orders.

At Airshow in the southern city of Zhuhai, the of China, said the company was "confident" that dialogue will resume between US and Chinese negotiators.

"A healthy airspace industry is in the best interests of both countries," Bruns said at a conference on Tuesday on the sidelines of the exhibition, where companies are showing off their latest planes, helicopters and drones this week.

While Boeing's large planes have avoided tariffs, China has other ways to hurt the company, just as it battles for bigger shares of the massive market.

"The retaliation would mainly be in the form of cancelled orders with a redistribution to Airbus, perhaps as much as 30-40 per cent of the existing order book," said Vinay Bhaskara, a for

"At the current moment, I give perhaps a 25 per cent chance of this scenario where China cancels Boeing orders wholesale," Bhaskara told AFP.

The trade war comes at a particularly awkward time for Boeing -- which announced last year it had won a major contract worth around USD 38 billion to sell 300 aircraft to China.

In a worrisome signal, China's -- a company that has bought exclusively from Boeing for three decades -- is in talks with Airbus, according to

"This could be very good for It might just allow them to get to their rumoured goal of 70 single aisle (A320) jets per month," said Richard Aboulafia, an industry analyst at US consultancy

China is expected to surpass the States as the world's biggest aircraft market in the mid-2020s, according to the International Air Association.

Boeing delivered 202 aircraft in China last year, beating Airbus, which sold 176.

Despite his rival's potential woes, the of Airbus China, Xu Gang, was also worried by the prospects of more tariffs.

"I think nobody will be the winner of this kind of trade war," Xu said, adding that his company welcomes dialogue between the US and Chinese governments.

"The trade war damages the trade relationship, which also damages a lot of commercial expectations of many private companies, and this will cost a lot of employment" and hurt salaries of the middle-class, he said.

"This, of course, will have a negative impact on the growth," he said.

Airbus would not necessarily have much to celebrate if China dropped Boeing orders.

"Airbus' order book is backlogged for several years, so it doesn't stand to gain from any challenges which Boeing may face," said John Strickland, analyst and director of in

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

First Published: Wed, November 07 2018. 16:45 IST