Why Airbus Stock Slipped on Friday
Airbus just picked a new "Head of Technology Airbus."
The company may also have eliminated the title of Chief Technology Officer and may be de-emphasizing R&D.
Other Airbus divisions have cut costs. Is Commercial Aircraft next?
10 stocks we like better than Airbus SE ›
Airbus (OTC: EADSY) stock sank 2.2% in afternoon trading, 3:10 p.m. ET, on news of a bit of a management shake-up.
As Reuters reports, Airbus named Remi Maillard, currently head of Airbus India and South Asia, to lead its Research & Technology division as "Head of Technology Airbus" at the same time as he runs engineering at the company's core commercial airplanes business. Curiously, Airbus seems to have eliminated the title of "Chief Technology Officer" from its management team, however.
Sources suggest the change has something to do with Airbus plans to introduce a successor to its popular A320neo airplane toward the end of this decade. While company CEO Guillaume Faury says technology remains "absolutely instrumental to the future of Airbus," at least one source believes the company is de-emphasizing technology (and maybe research and development spending), perhaps in an effort to cut costs.
So what are investors to make of this?
Perhaps nothing. Executives come and go and move around plenty in a large aerospace company like Airbus. One promotion does not a business shift make -- necessarily. But if Airbus is cutting costs in commercial airplanes, this would line up nicely with efforts to cut costs in the company's space division, for example, where layoffs and other cuts have been ongoing the past two years.
If cost cuts are happening, this could be good news for investors. Priced at 28 times earnings and expected to grow earnings nearly 24% annually over the next five years -- and paying a dividend yield of nearly 2% -- Airbus stock already looks attractive.
Cut costs and boost profits even just a little bit, and the stock could easily become cheap enough to buy.
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The former is your AI-enriched, everyday option, which offers a stylus and keyboard that feel a lot like the OnePlus Pad 3's accessories. It's big, loud, and powerful, but it's also slightly more expensive than the Pad 3 and probably offers the best cross-platform functionality if you already have a Motorola phone in your pocket. The Legion Tab Gen 3, on the other hand, is a gaming tablet that drops the price point just a bit. It combines last year's Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset with Legion ColdFront cooling and a 165Hz refresh rate to throw you into the action and keep you there until the 6,550mAh battery runs out. And then, there's the venerable iPad — practically the OnePlus Pad 3's evil twin, still set on world dominance. More specifically, I'm talking about the iPad Air ($529 at Amazon). 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As an Android fan first and foremost, if it were me, I'd just grab the OnePlus Pad 3 and call it a day — if you can fit it into your budget, you can't really go wrong. OnePlus Pad 3 MSRP: $699.99 Flagship-killing tablet. The OnePlus Pad 3 is a true step into the flagship tablet race, pairing Qualcomm's best chipset with an upgraded design and some of our favorite tablet software features in the business. See price at AmazonSee price at OnePlus Positives Vibrant 165Hz display Vibrant 165Hz display Premium, versatile design Premium, versatile design Phenomenal battery life Phenomenal battery life Blisteringly fast charging Blisteringly fast charging Elite performance Elite performance Punchy speakers Cons Rising price tag Rising price tag Limited Android version updates Limited Android version updates Basic front camera Basic front camera No fingerprint biometrics