China Southern Airlines orders 110 planes worth $10b from Boeing
The carrier will purchase 30 Next-Generation 737 and 50 737 MAX planes valued at $7.24 billion at list prices
BEIJING:
China Southern Airlines has ordered 110 planes from Boeing worth more than $10 billion at list prices, the airline said Thursday, as a Chinese boom in air travel defies slowing economic growth.
The carrier will purchase 30 Next-Generation 737 and 50 737 MAX planes valued at $7.24 billion at list prices, it said in a statement to the Shanghai stock exchange.
Boeing reveals world's largest airplane
The company's Xiamen Airlines unit will buy an additional 30 737 MAX models valued at $2.88, it said in a separate statement.
China, the world's second-largest economy, is already Asia's biggest aircraft buyer as a growing middle class takes to the skies in ever-increasing numbers.
Earlier this month, China's budget carrier Spring Airlines announced plans to buy 60 aircraft from Boeing rival Airbus, worth $6.3 billion at list prices.
The major Boeing order comes despite slowing growth in the Chinese economy, which aviation industry officials fear could hurt air travel.
Chinese firms sign deal to buy 300 Boeing planes: Xinhua
China logged its worst economic performance since the global financial crisis in the third quarter, with gross domestic product rising just 6.9 percent -- its lowest level in six years.
Seattle-based Boeing has estimated that China will add 6,330 new aircraft worth $950 billion to its commercial fleet by 2034.
China Southern Airlines has ordered 110 planes from Boeing worth more than $10 billion at list prices, the airline said Thursday, as a Chinese boom in air travel defies slowing economic growth.
The carrier will purchase 30 Next-Generation 737 and 50 737 MAX planes valued at $7.24 billion at list prices, it said in a statement to the Shanghai stock exchange.
Boeing reveals world's largest airplane
The company's Xiamen Airlines unit will buy an additional 30 737 MAX models valued at $2.88, it said in a separate statement.
China, the world's second-largest economy, is already Asia's biggest aircraft buyer as a growing middle class takes to the skies in ever-increasing numbers.
Earlier this month, China's budget carrier Spring Airlines announced plans to buy 60 aircraft from Boeing rival Airbus, worth $6.3 billion at list prices.
The major Boeing order comes despite slowing growth in the Chinese economy, which aviation industry officials fear could hurt air travel.
Chinese firms sign deal to buy 300 Boeing planes: Xinhua
China logged its worst economic performance since the global financial crisis in the third quarter, with gross domestic product rising just 6.9 percent -- its lowest level in six years.
Seattle-based Boeing has estimated that China will add 6,330 new aircraft worth $950 billion to its commercial fleet by 2034.