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British Airways Owner to Order 53 Airbus and Boeing Long-Haul Planes

British Airways Owner to Order 53 Airbus and Boeing Long-Haul Planes

Epoch Times09-05-2025

International Airlines Group (IAG), owner of British Airways and Aer Lingus, will place an order for 53 new Airbus and Boeing long-haul aircraft after reporting strong first-quarter results on Friday.
The company said it will purchase 32 Boeing Co. 787-10 aircraft for British Airways and 21 Airbus SE A330neo planes, which may be assigned to IAG's airline brands including Aer Lingus, Iberia, and Level.
They are set to be delivered between 2028 to 2033 and are in addition to the 18 planes it ordered in March.
The aircraft are mainly for replacement, with around one third to be used for growth in IAG's core markets, the company said.
It comes as IAG said its first-quarter 2025 revenue grew 9.6 percent to €7.04 billion, while operating profit increased by €130 million to €198 million, as strong revenue growth and lower fuel prices offset expected cost increases.
Its operating margin also increased to 2.8 percent.
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IAG credited the strong results to 'good operational performance,' particularly at British Airways, while noting that Iberia and Vueling continue to be 'amongst the most punctual airlines in the world.'
The British-Spanish company also credited 'robust' demand across its North Atlantic routes, which saw 27.8 percent of the total available seat kilometre (ASK) revenue in the first three months to March 2025.
Demand was also strong in Europe (23.3 percent of the total ASK) and Latin America and the Caribbean (22.5 percent) it said.
Spain and the UK were slightly more disappointing with just 8.4 percent of the total ASK.
The results come as plane manufacturers have been battling with supply chain snags and other challenges that have delayed deliveries.
However, IAG said its outlook for the full year remains unchanged, though it acknowledged 'geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty.'
As of May 6, the company is around 80 percent booked for the second quarter, with revenue ahead of last year, and 29 percent booked for the second half, which it said is broadly in line with last year
Luis Gallego, IAG chief executive officer, said the company's strong first quarter results 'reflect the performance of our businesses and the effectiveness of our strategy and transformation.'
For now, the company remains focused on strengthening its brands across its markets of the North Atlantic, Latin America, and intra-Europe.
'We continue to see resilient demand for air travel across all our markets, particularly in the premium cabins and despite the macroeconomic uncertainty.
'Our commitment to financial strength and shareholder value is reflected in €530 million of share buybacks completed in 2025 so far, alongside a proposed final dividend of €288 million, which brings our total dividend for 2024 to €435 million,' Gallego said.
The announcement comes as Boeing seeks to ramp up production of its best-selling 737 MAX jet to a rate of 38 per month this year, following a turbulent 2024 that saw the plane maker come under scrutiny due to safety issues.
Separately on Thursday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick

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Artists Accuse Prominent Dealer Reco Sturgis of Issuing Death Threats and Withholding Payments
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Artists Accuse Prominent Dealer Reco Sturgis of Issuing Death Threats and Withholding Payments

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Court documents filed in the Civil Court of New York show that a settlement of more than $463,000 was reached, but Weisman told ARTnews that no payments have been made. Other companies, including CFG Merchant Solutions, Byzfunder, Mantis Funding LLC, DHL Express, and Sutton Maddison Inc., have sued Sturgis for outstanding debts between 2023 and 2025. The cumulative damage claims in these lawsuits, together with the rent he owes Weisman and overdue payments to artists, exceed $1 million. Neither Sturgis nor his attorney, Daniel Kokhba, responded to ARTnews' requests for comment. In 2023, Sturgis gave a rare interview to Shoutout Atlanta, in which he said, 'The relationships I build, whether with artists or clients, or employees, are built on respect, admiration, and trust.' (The artists who have made financial claims against Sturgis in this article have provided corroborating invoices, text messages, and email correspondence that have been reviewed by ARTnews.) British sculptor Beth Carter, who began working with Hugo Galerie in 2016, said problems began around 2019. '[When he closed to the galleries in 2023] he didn't tell most of the artists—he just moved everyone's work into storage,' Carter wrote in an email to ARTnews. She claims Sturgis owes her $200,000 and sold several large bronzes after she repeatedly asked for their return over the course of a year, including a life-size Minotaur that cost her £10,000 to cast. 'He has not paid me for any of these pieces,' she said, adding that Sturgis sold several of her works below what she believes was market value. While Carter did not sign a consigner agreement with the gallery, she said Sturgis 'regularly confirmed inventory and sales records.' She eventually retrieved her remaining unsold works—shipped at her own expense back to the UK—and chose not to sue after receiving legal advice on the cost. 'I counted Reco as a friend of mine (as did my husband) for many years,' she wrote. 'We stayed with him at his apartment in New York and he stayed with us in the UK.' Carter said that the prolonged uncertainty has caused her and other artists who worked with Sturgis 'emotional, mental, and financial harm.' ARTnews reviewed emails in which two collectors contacted her about works they claim to have paid Hugo Galerie for but never received. Another British sculptor, Joseph Paxton, who started working with Hugo Galerie in 2017, told ARTnews that Sturgis has refused to return three bronze sculptures and two drawings worth at least $70,000 combined. He also claims he is owed almost $10,000 in payments. 'I only discovered Reco had closed the galleries when another artist from New York who had recently started exhibiting with Reco messaged me to say he'd walked past the SoHo gallery and seen it was all closed up,' he wrote in an email. French artist Patrick Pietropoli told ARTnews he is 'one of the artists owed the most' by Sturgis. 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While they weren't threatened directly by Sturgis, the artist said the dealer had been 'emotionally manipulating.' One of the artist's friends was threatened by Sturgis after she posted a message online warning people about his conduct. In an emailed reply shared with ARTnews, Sturgis wrote to the artist: '[Your friend] knows absolutely nothing about me or my business… and now she is going to regret putting her nose where it does not belong. I will not tolerate this anymore. She in danger. This old bitch will die. On my mother's grave.' Sturgis emailed the artist just this week to say that he is planning to open a new gallery in New York. 'I have been working on opening another gallery. But it is not as easy as I thought it would be. I am determined so it will happen sooner or later. Most likely in SoHo again,' he wrote. He offered to continue selling their work, proposing a higher percentage of sales 'to cover some of the debt owed.' Several artists told ARTnews that after Hugo Galerie closed, Sturgis attempted to continue selling their work, offering 60 percent of sales to gradually pay back what he owed. Canadian painter Joseph Adolphe, who said he is owed over $30,000, publicly warned others via Instagram in October 2023. 'Numerous other artists are also left in the cold, many with their art unretrievable,' he wrote. Sturgis later messaged him: 'Please take this post down… If you damage my reputation with the art world, it will make it impossible for me to pay you.' In an email to ARTnews, Adolphe wrote, 'Of course there will never be any financial closure, but a judgement against him would be nice. He is in hiding, if we can locate him, we can serve him and have our day in court.' Painter Brian Keith Stephens, who began working with Hugo Galerie in 2016, filed a complaint in the Civil Court of New York in 2023 in which he alleges Sturgis owes him $40,351.50. However, Stephens said he was unable to serve Sturgis because he could not locate him. Stephen also told ARTnews he sold many of his works below market value. 'His messages were delusional and aggressive,' he wrote in an email, of Sturgis's state after the closure of Hugo Galerie. 'He blamed the artists for his failure instead of taking responsibility.' Stephens, who never signed a consignment contract, said his lawyer determined that their correspondence on works, prices, and terms was sufficient to constitute a legal agreement. In a group email reviewed by ARTnews that Sturgis sent to many artists he worked with, he directed homophobic slurs at Adolphe and Stephens. In one message reviewed by ARTnews, he posted an image of Adolphe's daughter and named her school, which prompted Adolphe to contact campus security. 'The whole thing is a sad documentation of the machinations of a truly disturbed mind,' Adolphe said. French artist, Benoit Trimborn, told ARTnews that he began working with Hugo in 2016 and that Sturgis owes him $22,000 after he sold three of his works on Artsy. He said that he tried to get Sturgis to sign a consigner agreement, but he never answered. 'He makes promises without keeping them,' Trimborn wrote in an email. 'I know that he mistreated many artists beyond the non-payment of debts, but I am not one of them, I think I was relatively spared compared to other artists.' French painter Marc Chalmé, who said he is owed $48,000, told ARTnews that he was able to retrieve his work but received threatening texts and videos from Sturgis. In one screenshot shared with ARTnews, Sturgis sent an image of a masked man holding a knife with the caption, 'Keep posting shit about me.' Chalmé had previously posted on Facebook about Hugo, writing 'Bad experience with this gallery, no payment for a sold-out show.' 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