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Airbus selling its defense electronics business
by Richard Tomkins
Amsterdam, Netherlands (UPI) Mar 22, 2016


Italy orders more Aermacchi trainer aircraft
Rome (UPI) Mar 22, 2016 - Finmeccanica reports it is to deliver nine additional Aermacchi M-346 advanced training aircraft to the Italian Ministry of Defense beginning this year.

The contract for the planes, valued at more than $337 million, was issued by the ministry's National Armaments Directorate. It includes logistics support and an additional development phase of the plane's integrated training systems.

"The Aermacchi M-346 is the most advanced trainer aircraft available on the market today, the only one in the world designed to train pilots who will go on to fly new-generation, high-performance defense aircraft," said Mauro Moretti, Finmeccanica's chief executive officer and general manager.

"It has won all the most important international bids and we are offering it as the platform on which the new American 'Top Guns' trainer aircraft could be based."

The nine new -346 aircraft ordered will bring the number of the trainers flown by the Italian Air Force to 18.

The Aermacchi M-346 is a twin-engine transonic aircraft with a maximum speed of 572 knots, a range of 1,070 miles and a service ceiling of 45,000 feet. Other operators of the aircraft include Israel, Poland and Singapore.

Europe's Airbus Group is selling its Defense Electronics business to KKR & Co., a U.S.-headquartered global investment firm.

The sale is expected to close in the first quarter of next year and is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals and employee consultation, Airbus said.

"This is ... aimed at repositioning Defense Electronics for the future with an excellent outcome for all stakeholders," said Bernhard Gerwert, chief executive officer of Airbus Defense and Space. "Defense Electronics is a strong, profitable business with significant growth potential and we are convinced that KKR and the Defense Electronics management team and employees will continue to strongly develop the business going forward."

Defense Electronics, based in Germany, is a provider of mission-critical sensors, integrated systems and services for defense and security. Its sale to KKR is seen as a step forward in the portfolio reorganization announced by Airbus Defense and Space in 2014.

KKR has valued the defense electronics business at an enterprise value of about $1.58 billion. The Airbus Group said it may maintain a minority stake in the business to ensure a smooth, seamless transition for all concerned.

"We are delighted to have been chosen as the best partner for the defense electronics business," said Johannes Huth, member and head of KKR Europe, Middle East and Africa. "KKR will support the growth and development of the company with its financial resources, international network, long-standing expertise in the global industrial sector and its extensive experience building successful industrial companies in Germany, such as MTU Aero Engines, Demag Cranes and Kion."


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