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planes112 wrote:Because boeing obviously never sold under the cost of production for the dreamliner. Ever
alasizon wrote:planes112 wrote:Because boeing obviously never sold under the cost of production for the dreamliner. Ever
Or the UA 73G order.
AA737-823 wrote:Well, I love Boeing, but POT, meet KETTLE.
The UA 73G deal instantly comes to mind.
BUT- I suspect that this exact incident is how we know that Bombardier has a formidable product. If it were a turd, Boeing wouldn't care about it.
alasizon wrote:planes112 wrote:Because boeing obviously never sold under the cost of production for the dreamliner. Ever
Or the UA 73G order.
phxa340 wrote:alasizon wrote:planes112 wrote:Because boeing obviously never sold under the cost of production for the dreamliner. Ever
Or the UA 73G order.
Dreamliners we're sold at the prices well before the problems hit. Boeing probably thought they would still be profitable before $&$$ hit the fan. BBD knowingly sold them at an extreme loss. Additionally, while many will argue the state of Washington subsidizes Boeing via tax breaks, Canada did a direct cash infusion = a different playing field imo. Neither Boeing, BBD, or Airbus is innocent here but imo BBD is really really pushing the envelope here.
planes112 wrote:AA737-823 wrote:Well, I love Boeing, but POT, meet KETTLE.
The UA 73G deal instantly comes to mind.
BUT- I suspect that this exact incident is how we know that Bombardier has a formidable product. If it were a turd, Boeing wouldn't care about it.
Again, the UA deal is super different. It is a US carrier buying from a US producer. Dumping laws do not apply because it is all within country
planes112 wrote:The timing does not matter for dumping cases. The thing that matters is that they were paid less than the cost of production.
Stitch wrote:planes112 wrote:The timing does not matter for dumping cases. The thing that matters is that they were paid less than the cost of production.
Well then a lot of things can be considered "dumping" with that metric - essentially anything sold below production cost for any reason.
I'm not an international finance and trade lawyer, but in the cases I have read about that involved accusations of dumping, they always involved a mature production line with known production costs that created product that was intentionally sold below said production costs to saturate a market and secure market share. Micron Technologies, for example, has filed multiple anti-dumping complaints with the US against established Japanese, Korean and Taiwanese DRAM manufacturers.
Boeing did not intentionally price their early 787 sales contracts below production costs because they had yet to build the thing so they didn't have a mature production line with known production costs and once they did have a mature line, the production costs had significantly exceeded the original projections due to all the re-work on the delivered frames. In addition, Boeing consistently raised 787 ASPs to help recover those additional costs. If they intended to dump 787s on the market to discourage customers from buying A330s and A350s, they would have continued to sell them at the original prices.
mercure1 wrote:Good for Boeing, this should be investigated.
By regular financial measures, the project should be dead and instead public money is being directly used to prop up production while aircraft are sold at below cost, the same argument Brazil lodged with WTO. Dumping planes is no different than dumping steel or lumber.
With US president only today telling Canada and Mexico they will reopen provisions on NAFTA and last week having placed import duties on Canadian timber, this is good further ammunition for US side to negotiate over.
planes112 wrote:The timing does not matter for dumping cases. The thing that matters is that they were paid less than the cost of production.
I agree about the cash infusion for the CA govt
Dutchy wrote:Wow, Boeing feels threatened by little Bombardier. Everyone is guilty of this in the aviation industry. I mean look at the 787 program, tax breaks here and there, outsourcing to countries where subcontractors get government benefits of various kinds etc. etc. etc. Indeed a clear cut case of pot and kettle.
iamlucky13 wrote:mercure1 wrote:Good for Boeing, this should be investigated.
By regular financial measures, the project should be dead and instead public money is being directly used to prop up production while aircraft are sold at below cost, the same argument Brazil lodged with WTO. Dumping planes is no different than dumping steel or lumber.
With US president only today telling Canada and Mexico they will reopen provisions on NAFTA and last week having placed import duties on Canadian timber, this is good further ammunition for US side to negotiate over.
It's only no different if it's not the same.
Dumping a product to undermine the market position of a foreign competitor is a problem. Selling below cost as a loss leader to establish a market foothold, in contrast, is a long-running practice.
iamlucky13 wrote:It's only no different if it's not the same.
777Mech wrote:so in theory, Boeing should be fighting against the ME3 "price dumping" seats in the TATL markets? Or are they just picking and choosing the battles that will line their pockets?
planes112 wrote:Because boeing obviously never sold under the cost of production for the dreamliner. Ever
PlanesNTrains wrote:planes112 wrote:AA737-823 wrote:Well, I love Boeing, but POT, meet KETTLE.
The UA 73G deal instantly comes to mind.
BUT- I suspect that this exact incident is how we know that Bombardier has a formidable product. If it were a turd, Boeing wouldn't care about it.
Again, the UA deal is super different. It is a US carrier buying from a US producer. Dumping laws do not apply because it is all within country
Has anyone shown that the UA deal was below their cost to produce them? They may have but I haven't seen it personally.
Newbiepilot wrote:PlanesNTrains wrote:planes112 wrote:
Again, the UA deal is super different. It is a US carrier buying from a US producer. Dumping laws do not apply because it is all within country
Has anyone shown that the UA deal was below their cost to produce them? They may have but I haven't seen it personally.
Bombardier took a forward loss when they made the Delta deal. That acknowledges that they were losing money. If Boeing sold an airplane that actually is a loss, that loss would show up somewhere. That UA 73G deal was aggressively priced, but I fully believe that there were some offsets against other businesses between United and Boeing in that deal that allowed it to not be sold at a loss. It probably was one of the smallest margin deals they have done, but it is not the same as what Bombardier did. Bombardier told the world they sold at less than cost.
AA737-823 wrote:Well, I love Boeing, but POT, meet KETTLE.
The UA 73G deal instantly comes to mind.
BUT- I suspect that this exact incident is how we know that Bombardier has a formidable product. If it were a turd, Boeing wouldn't care about it.
mercure1 wrote:Good for Boeing, this should be investigated.
By regular financial measures, the project should be dead and instead public money is being directly used to prop up production while aircraft are sold at below cost, the same argument Brazil lodged with WTO. Dumping planes is no different than dumping steel or lumber.
With US president only today telling Canada and Mexico they will reopen provisions on NAFTA and last week having placed import duties on Canadian timber, this is good further ammunition for US side to negotiate over.
Dutchy wrote:Wow, Boeing feels threatened by little Bombardier. Everyone is guilty of this in the aviation industry. I mean look at the 787 program, tax breaks here and there, outsourcing to countries where subcontractors get government benefits of various kinds etc. etc. etc. Indeed a clear cut case of pot and kettle.
b747400erf wrote:Dutchy wrote:Wow, Boeing feels threatened by little Bombardier. Everyone is guilty of this in the aviation industry. I mean look at the 787 program, tax breaks here and there, outsourcing to countries where subcontractors get government benefits of various kinds etc. etc. etc. Indeed a clear cut case of pot and kettle.
Boeing must feel emboldened with a former executive now in the Trump administration. The administration runs on favours for friends and pay to play, so Boeing expects to get American government help in taking out a foreign competitor.
reidar76 wrote:All new aircraft are sold below production cost for several years after launch. It took many years, and close to 400 aircraft sold (if I remember correctly), for Boeing to reach breakeven on the 787. That is, breakeven (production costs/ sales price), not return on investment (currently more then 32 billions in deferred costs).
iamlucky13 wrote:
More importantly, no dumping case can proceed without a determination of injury.
PlanesNTrains wrote:planes112 wrote:AA737-823 wrote:Well, I love Boeing, but POT, meet KETTLE.
The UA 73G deal instantly comes to mind.
BUT- I suspect that this exact incident is how we know that Bombardier has a formidable product. If it were a turd, Boeing wouldn't care about it.
Again, the UA deal is super different. It is a US carrier buying from a US producer. Dumping laws do not apply because it is all within country
Has anyone shown that the UA deal was below their cost to produce them? They may have but I haven't seen it personally.
surfdog75 wrote:The point that Boeing is missing is the C series was by far the most capable aircraft in the category. Boeing doesn't even sell anything comparable to the size of CS 100. Also, new 73NGs, while great, use 70s and 80s technology in the name of keeping the same type rating for a few customers.
jimbo737 wrote:Everyone north of the border knows that BBD has been the generous recipient of ridiculous amounts of federal and provincial subsidization for years and years
jimbo737 wrote:to be replaced by a commercial venture that understands how to live within its means.
surfdog75 wrote:The point that Boeing is missing is the C series was by far the most capable aircraft in the category. Boeing doesn't even sell anything comparable to the size of CS 100. Also, new 73NGs, while great, use 70s and 80s technology in the name of keeping the same type rating for a few customers.
tlecam wrote:1. Is BBD offering lower prices in another market than in its home market?