vendredi 17 mai 2013

Textron





TEXTRON INC COM STK USD0.125 (TXT)

27,60 USD 
-0,04% | -0,01 
 16/05/2013 22:02




Textron est une entreprise américaine du secteur de l'aéronautique et de la défense. Textron a été créée en 1923. Son siège social est à Providence, Rhode Island (USA). Textron est en 2011, avec 32 000 salariés et 11,3 milliards de dollars de chiffre d'affaires, classée au 236e rang du Fortune 500.


Fortune 500

Rank: 225 
Previous rank: 236 
CEO: Scott C. Donnelly 
Headquarters:
40 Westminster St.
Providence, RI. 02903
401-421-2800
Website: www.textron.com







April 17, 2013 8:11 pm

Textron: Cessna turbulence

Jet sales have not come back as corporate earnings have boomed
First gold collapsed. Then premium cupcakes. Now corporate jets. Coke dealers and Dubai real estate brokers: you are officially on notice.

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On Wednesday, Textron, maker of Cessna aircraft, reduced its 2013 outlook for business jet deliveries, foreseeing a decline from 2012, and brought down its earnings guidance by almost a tenth. The stock fell by 13 per cent. The depth of the guidance cut, and the reaction, might seem puzzling. Cessna accounted for a quarter of Textron’s revenues last year, but only about 7 per cent of its segment profits (the company also makes helicopters and drones, among other things).
Part of the explanation is the high operating leverage in manufacturing aircraft: a little sales growth can mean a big jump in profit. Equally important, resurgence at Cessna has been long awaited, and is a key part of any bullish long-term view of Textron. The business jet market, as JPMorgan has shown, was historically correlated with corporate profits, but jet sales have not come back as corporate earnings have boomed since the financial crisis. Cessna sold $5.6bn in aircraft in 2008; it sold $3.1bn worth in 2012. The temptation to put 2008-like Cessna revenue figure into a Textron earnings model may have been difficult for analysts to resist. Now, however, 2008 looks farther away than ever.
The corporate jet is a symbol of excess some companies may be leery of, and the recent surge in corporate profits has less to do with growth than spending less on things like aircraft. Worse, the profit cycle appears to be turning over. Is there any reason for hope at Cessna? A key question is whether it can go where the growth is. Roughly 85 of per cent of Cessna sales come from North America and Europe. If giddy corporate spending is going to blossom again soon, it is unlikely to happen there.




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