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New Jets - How many do the Gods produce every year?
Plus - Why over supply affects the top line, down the line.
Youāre reading the the 2nd issue of Biz Jet Buzz, the business aviation newsletter that educates and entertains in equal doses.
Get smarter about the business jet market and enjoy the process. Whatās not to like?
Hereās what Iāve got for you:
š©ļø Shiny new biz jets - How many are delivered every year?
šŖš¼ Why I refer to the jet manufacturers as the Gods?
š Jet Market Monday: G550 | Challenger 650 | CJ1 | CJ1+
šļø Biz Av News - BOMBARDIER rebrands
š§š»āāļøAI Jet of the Month - Happy World Pilotās Day!
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Youāre about to learn about new jet deliveries - who makes them and how many.
But letās talk about āDeliveryā for a sec.
You can have the best story in the world, but if you canāt tell it well, donāt tell it at all. Youāll only bore everyone and embarrass yourself.
I donāt have much time for things that bore me. Therefore, I donāt expect you to read boring things.
I want you to learning everything Iāve learned as a jet salesman and enjoy the process, not be bored by it.
Biz Jet Buzz should be dishing out dopamine hits like youāve just found $100 in a pair of shorts not worn in a while.
Then another hit when you realise itās the Benjie you won from your buddy playing golf last year.
Thatās where Iām aimingā¦
Buckle up! Time to deliverā¦
What two words come to mind when you hear Market?
No reallyā¦ close your eyes and thinkā¦ MARKET.
The law of SUPPLY and DEMAND combines two fundamental economic principles that describe how changes in the price of goods, affect their supply and demand.
The three are interdependent - Supply - Price - Demand
Remember your Dad gave you 10p for the shop? Delighted with yourself, you could buy 10 penny jellies. When the shopkeeper increased the price to 2p, you only got 5 jellies.
Price up, demand down. And vice versa. This is the Law of Demand.
With penny jellies now 2p, the guy making jello decides the penny jelly game is where itās atā¦ as the price just doubled!
Price up, supply up. And vice versa. This is the Law of Supply.
Everyone has a price theyāll sell an asset at. Even when you donāt want to sell, if the price goes up and up and up, eventually it reaches the offer you canāt refuse and becomes supply.
Letās continue with supply but talk about jets ānā not jellies.
Recycling in the aviation industry is nothing new. Pre-owned jets are simply recycled inventory.
For the origin of supply, we must look to The Gods of the industry. Supply originates from the Original Equipment Manufacturers. The OEMs.
Alphabetically, so Iām not accused of favouritism: Airbus, Boeing, Bombardier, Cessna (Textron), Cirrus, Dassault, Embraer, Gulfstream, Honda and Pilatus.
These days theyāre producing around 700 brand new jets a year, collecting revenues of around $30+ billion. Note the automotive industry bring in $1.9 trillion. Biz Av is a very niche industry.
Figure 2.1 - Total Business Jet Deliveries
I refer to the OEMS as The Gods for a number reasonsā¦
Theyāre producing some of the most amazing machines man has ever seen.
Without them (and customers for jets) there would be no business aviation industry. No operators, no management, no maintenance, no crews, no aviation attorneys, no aviation financiers, no aviation tax advisors, no brokers. Nothing!
It takes balls and lotās of foresight to commit to designing and building something that wonāt bring in a return for at least 10 years. Itās extremely difficult to predict not only demand but also the competitive landscape that far out. This deserves a lot credit.
And the fourth reason, born in the most defining characteristics of The Gods - Power and Control.
Supply is a delicate balance between producing enough to meet market demand, selling as many as you can to maximise revenue, but not producing too much to where you have excess supply in the system.
Excess supply hurts price and therefore profit.
Enzo worded this a lot better than I just did:
āFerrari will always deliver one car less than the market demandsā
Soā¦ have The Gods listened to Enzo? Are they being smart with supply?
What did you observe about the Figure 2.1 above? Take a look again.
Big spike in deliveries in ā08.
The three periods with the highest jet demand in history were:
1996/7 - The Dotcom Boom
2006/7 - The Housing Market Boom
In Figure 2.1 above, you can see that supply got a little crazy leading up to 2009.
What about 2021/2? - It looks like nothing happened. If you read Biz Jet Buzzš© š #1, youād know that something did happen, and it happened in a very big way. 2021 saw just as much demand as 2007 or 1997. |
So, why wasnāt there more supply? Why was there no spike in output? Why didnāt the OEMs dial up production like they did in 2007?
Some say supply chain challenges prevented increases in production. Certainly some of the reason but I donāt think itās the full story.
Thereās an element of smart business being played - to which I applaud!
Itās damaging to an organization to dial up a highly complex production line one year, to then dial down the next. Constantly hiring and firing to suit short term demand fluctuations. The race is long and requires consistency and discipline.
Thereās another reason - Jet Value Retention.
A reputation for poor value retention should be a real concern for an OEM. We know aircraft depreciate. But if your aircraft depreciate faster than your competitors, you have a problem.
As Iām in aircraft sales, I think of the sales team in action.
The meetingās going great. Youāve presented every reason why your jet is the best money can buy. The conversation leads to priceā¦ and the prospect brings up āpoor value retentionā.
A reputation for poor value retention is sticky. Itās not quite like herpes, because thatās for life. Itās more like obesityā¦ very tough to shake, but by consistently making certain choices, itās possible.
Too many jets in the system puts pressure on aircraft residual values.
This pressure eventually makes it all the way to the top line, becoming the sales teamās problem. This problem can be solved by discounting price.
Itās safe to say that Enzo Ferrari would be proud of the Gods.
Despite the recent record demand and bursting order books, output from all of them has been relatively smooth.
Figure 2.2 - Deliveries by OEM
History did not repeat itself. There was no spike in deliveries during the recent market boom.
Based on this, I predict:
Output from the OEMs going forward will be a lot smoother than we witnessed in the much younger business aviation industry pre-2008.
That was Supply. Now learn about the other tiny word you had to squint to see - Demand.
Live the buzz! š
Colin
I'm Colin, I help jet owners and corporates upgrade, sell or find the perfect jet as part of a global team of aviation experts.
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DISCLAIMER: This newsletter is strictly educational and not advice for investments or financial decisions. Any and all opinions herein are the personal opinions of the author, Colin Dunne, unless stated otherwise.
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