Airbus enters the final stretch before its half-year results on 29 July with a series of strategic moves that touch on everything from sovereign cloud computing to engine reliability and a potential order wave at the Farnborough Airshow. The aerospace heavyweight has secured a multi-year cloud contract with French provider Scaleway, resolved the worst of an A220 engine grounding crisis, and is managing A350 supply chain constraints by chartering an Antonov An-124 to airlift fuselage sections from the US — all while analysts pencil in solid second-quarter numbers.
Cloud Sovereignty Comes First
The Scaleway deal aims to host critical applications in aircraft development, engineering, production and corporate operations, with an initial migration of around 70 sensitive workloads by 2028 and a possible expansion to 900 over five to six years. Airbus vetted 150 technical and legal requirements before awarding the contract, including safeguards against foreign “kill switches” and extraterritorial legislation. Catherine Jestin, the group’s chief digital officer, noted that Mistral AI models already running on Scaleway’s infrastructure are accelerating the company’s artificial-intelligence strategy. The tender process, launched in January 2026, drew roughly 50 expressions of interest and narrowed to four finalists before Scaleway beat out nine other bidders. The decision was heavily influenced by European regulatory compliance and protection from non-EU legal systems. Scaleway was already selected by the European Commission in April 2026 to supply a sovereign public cloud for EU institutions and counts LVMH and France’s health data system among its clients.
Engine Groundings Fade, But Costs Remain
The most pressing operational headache — the Pratt & Whitney PW1500G engine crisis on the A220 — appears to be winding down. The share of the A220 fleet grounded due to engine problems fell from 17% in November 2025 to 2–3% today. Programme chief Guillaume Chevasson considers the acute phase effectively over, with repair shop turnaround times now averaging 200 days per engine after Pratt & Whitney expanded maintenance capacity and introduced technical upgrades. Yet the crisis has left scars: Airbus cut its 2026 A220 production target to 12 aircraft per month, and carriers including Swiss, EgyptAir, airBaltic and ITA Airways suffered operational disruptions. ITA is seeking roughly €150 million in compensation, while Airbus filed its own damages claim against Pratt & Whitney in March. On a more forward-looking note, Quebec — which owns a 25% stake in the A220 programme — has indicated willingness to back a stretched A220-500 variant, though an announcement at Farnborough is considered unlikely. A launch could materialise in the fourth quarter of 2026.
A350 Supply Chain Pressures Force Creative Solutions
A different set of bottlenecks is weighing on the A350 programme. Because of ongoing constraints at the Spirit AeroSystems plant in Kinston, North Carolina, Airbus has begun flying A350 fuselage sections from the US to Europe on a chartered An‑124 rather than shipping them by sea — an expensive stopgap that Boeing also employs for its 767 sections. Airbus describes the integration of the Kinston facility, which it is in the process of absorbing from Spirit, as “a complex, multi-year journey,” effectively acknowledging that buffer stocks have been exhausted. The question for investors is whether this will trigger fresh delivery delays, with a potential Delta Air Lines order for the A350-1000 serving as an early test case. On the technical side, the programme remains on track: a 22-hour ultra-long-haul test flight of an A350-1000ULR to Australia is scheduled for next week as part of Qantas’s Project Sunrise, with 75–80 total certification flight hours planned.
Order Pipeline Heats Up Ahead of Farnborough
Airbus is also stepping up its commercial offensive. According to Bloomberg, the company is in advanced talks with Saudi low-cost carrier Flynas to convert options on eight A330neo aircraft into firm orders. Flynas already has 30 A330-900s on order with first deliveries from 2027 and, under the Saudi Vision 2030 plan, aims to expand its fleet to 250 aircraft by the end of the decade. Reports of a possible additional order from Condor for six A330neos were played down by sources. On the defence side, Airbus signed a memorandum of understanding with Northrop Grumman on the sidelines of the NATO summit in Ankara. The deal is intended to integrate the MQ-4C Triton surveillance drone into the NATO ISR fleet, backed by letters of intent from Denmark, Finland, Germany and Norway for up to five aircraft. Airbus will lead the ground segment alongside partners Kongsberg, Insta and Terma.
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Meanwhile, Ethiopian Airlines is evaluating Airbus’s A220 against offerings from Boeing and Embraer for an order of 25 narrowbodies, with a decision expected within weeks. And at the missile joint venture MBDA — in which Airbus holds 37.5% — Jean-Brice Dumont, currently head of Air Power at Airbus Defence and Space, will become CEO on 1 November, succeeding Eric Béranger. Under Béranger, MBDA’s revenue nearly doubled to €5.8 billion and its order backlog hit a record €44.4 billion. The company plans €5 billion in investment by 2030 and a 40% increase in missile production this year.
Analysts Raise Sights as Shares Trade Below 52-Week High
The stock itself has shown resilience. At €48.40, the share price stands 6.3% above its 50-day moving average of €45.51 and is also perched above the 200-day line of €47.20. The relative strength index of 53.8 suggests no overbought condition. The market capitalisation is €149.26 billion. On a one-month view the stock has gained 6.14%, though it remains 12% below the 52-week high of €55.00 reached on 12 January and is 1.22% lower year to date. Over 12 months, Airbus has risen 8.52%.
Ahead of the earnings print, several houses have updated their coverage. Banco BTG Pactual initiated with a buy rating and a €240 target. RBC Capital affirmed its outperform stance and lifted its price objective from €200 to €215, citing strong second-quarter delivery data. The consensus of 24 analysts now points to an average target of €215.88, with a range of €175–€258 and a clear buy bias. Metzler expects quarterly revenue of €20.2 billion and adjusted operating profit of €2.1 billion, with full-year deliveries of around 870 aircraft and free cash flow of €4.5 billion. The bank noted that an A320-heavy delivery mix supports fixed-cost absorption and that supply chain disruptions, while real, remain manageable — though the timing of year-end cash conversion will be critical.
A commercial update is scheduled for 21 July, followed by the full half-year report eight days later. Against that backdrop, the progress on the A220 engine fix, the Scaleway cloud deal, and the potential order catalysts at Farnborough could give investors a clearer sense of whether Airbus’s dual push for digital sovereignty and production stability is gaining altitude.
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