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Airbus posts sharp drop in quarterly profits

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Airbus' performance has been hampered by delays from its US-based engine supplier

Europe's Airbus has posted a sharp drop in first-quarter core ⁠profit, falling well below market expectations as the world's largest planemaker delivered fewer aircraft and was hurt by a weaker US dollar.

Adjusted operating profit fell 52% to €300m, while revenue declined 7% to 12.65m in the three months to March 31st.

Analysts had on average forecast adjusted operating profit of €348m on revenue of €12.39 ‌billion, according to company-compiled ⁠consensus data.

The European planemaker is racing against time to deliver the 870 aircraft it has targeted for 2026 after handing over 114 commercial aircraft in the quarter, down 16% from 136 a year earlier and below the 143 aircraft delivered by US rival Boeing ‌in the same period.

The group left its full-year guidance unchanged, reaffirming a target production rate of between 70 ⁠and 75 A320-family aircraft per month by the end of 2027 - ‌a goal it trimmed in February from an earlier ambition of ⁠hitting 75 ‌per month by the start of that year.

Even as orders remain strong, the France-based company is contending with late engine shipments from US-based supplier Pratt & Whitney which are falling short ⁠of its needs.

In an escalating dispute over late engine shipments that is threatening its ⁠efforts to lift aircraft production, Airbus is now pursuing potential damages, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters in March.

A rare bright spot in the quarter came from Airbus's defence and space business, which posted adjusted core profit of €130m, well ahead of the average ‌estimate of €111m.