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Bombardier profit misses as pandemic weighs on transportation unit, jet deliveries

Bombardier has today missed estimates for its third-quarter profit
Bombardier has today missed estimates for its third-quarter profit

Plane and train maker Bombardier has today missed estimates for third-quarter profit, hurt by weak performance in its aviation and transportation units due to coronavirus-led disruptions. 

The Montreal-based company, which is in the process of closing a deal to sell its rail division to French train maker Alstom, said revenue from its transportation unit fell 2.5%. 

Business jet deliveries were also lower in the quarter, falling to 24 units from 31 a year earlier, but revenue from the business rose about 10% as its flagship Global 7500 jet made up for a third of those deliveries. 

Bombardier's EBITDA and margins took a hit on costs related to the Global 7500 jets and lower deliveries during the quarter. 

Bombardier, which aims to break even on free cash flow in 2020, reported quarterly free cash flow of $706m. 

The company reported adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization of $176m for the quarter ended September 30, compared with $255m a year earlier. 

Analysts on average were expecting EBITDA to be $179.8m, according to Refinitiv data. 

The company said its revenue fell 5.3% to $3.53 billion.