Aengus Kelly
Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Well, there are three sources of aircraft in the world for an airline. There’s Boeing, Airbus and the leasing market/the used aircraft market. So if we do have, as I said on the CNBC interview, tit for tat, and the Europeans raise tariffs, the Chinese raise tariffs, the U.S. continues with the tariffs, we will ultimately see, absent Boeing and GE and Honeywell moving production offshore to Europe and to China, we’re going to see a retrenchment of Boeing sales to focus on the U.S. And we’re going to see Airbus then take most of the rest of the world. But so that -- if that -- that’s one outcome. But then the other scenario is that if you eliminate, and in my discussions with governmental officials, what I’ve said is, if you do put in tariffs, okay, suboptimal, but make sure that you don’t tariff the used aircraft market so that the consumer, say, be it in the U.S. or in Europe or in China for that matter, does not get punished, that the bill for the consumer is minimized. If you were to tariff, for example, used Airbus and new Airbus in the U.S., that means that there’s a smaller supply of aircraft available to U.S. carriers, which will mean less seats. Now, if you let used aircraft in, you’re not helping or hurting Airbus in any way, shape or form. Airbus have manufactured those aircraft, they’re gone. The same is true on the other side. In this worst case scenario, the Europeans should allow European carriers to access used Boeing airplanes because they’re not in any way helping or hurting Boeing by taking used aircraft. But if they don’t take the used aircraft, they’re hurting their own consumers more. The Joe [ph] public in the street is going to pay more for tickets if governments restrict the supply of aircraft to just new from one manufacturer. So I would hope that that is the way it will play out, which I guess if we go to, there’s a lot of negatives in that whole scenario. We hope that never happens, but at least there should be good demand for our metal.