Embraer recorded a $101 million provision in its fourth quarter results related to the February 25 bankruptcy of Indianapolis-based Republic Airways, resulting in a fourth quarter profit that fell short of analystsâ estimates. Embraerâs commercial aviation business produced a 10.4 percent operating margin for the quarter, compared with a 13.4 percent margin excluding the Republic bankruptcy provision.
Speaking during the companyâs year-end earnings call, Embraer CEO Frederico Curado and CFO Jose Filippo downplayed the companyâs exposure to the bankruptcy, however, each expressing confidence that all 24 undelivered E175 regional jets on Republicâs books will find their way to other operators if Republic cannot take them. Filippo reported that schedules call for delivery to Republic of nine E175s between August and December and another 15 next year, all associated with a capacity purchase agreement with United Airlines.
âUnited has a big need for these aircraft,â said Filippo. âSo be it Republic or be it another regional airline, we believe that we will deliver these aircraft. Itâs still a little bit early to say what will be the structure or the format because of the Chapter 11 [filing], but we are working on this now and as the next delivery is in August we have time to structure something.â
Curado added that Republic told Embraer that it does want the E175s. âWe do not see airplanes exiting the Republic fleet,â said the CEO. âActually we donât see them even waiving deliveries they have in backlog. So we believe those airplanes will be delivered, hopefully to Republic, but if not I think other alternatives will show up.â
Republicâs restructuring strategy centers on operating a single aircraft type, added Filippo, meaning it intends to shed its aging 50-seat ERJ-145s and Bombardier Q400s, neither to which Embraer has direct exposure. âRepublicâs restructuring is all about the 50-seater, itâs not at all about the 76-seater, so it will be a single-aircraft operator going forward,â he concluded.