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Malaysia Airlines to buy new Boeing jets if China rejects them

Malaysia Airlines parent company, Malaysia Aviation Group is in talks with Boeing to acquire new jets if Chinese Airlines stop taking delivery, according to its managing director, who spoke at a Malaysian news outlet Bernama.

Boeing is returning some 737 MAX aircraft to the U.S. after placing them in China before delivering to Chinese customers.

It is unclear who made the decision, as neither Boeing nor China have commented on the reason for the return of the jets.

Malaysia Airlines didn't immediately respond to our request for a comment.

If Boeing delivery slots become available as a result of the tariff war between the United States and China, MAG views this as a window to secure earlier-than-expected deliveries, Bernama reported MAG's Izham Ismail as saying.

Ismail, speaking to Bernama, said that MAG was in talks with Boeing regarding the possibility of taking over these slots.

Boeing's production has been slowed by increased regulatory scrutiny, a strike and the post-pandemic supply bottlenecks.

MAG, which is owned by Malaysian sovereign fund Khazanah Nasional has been steadily expanding and renewing their fleet. They aim to operate a fleet of 55 narrow-body 737 MAX aircraft from the new generation by 2030.

It announced last month that it would purchase 18 737 MAX 8 aircraft and 12 737 MAX 10 jets, with the option to buy 30 more.

The company also has an agreement to lease 25 737 MAX aircraft from Air Lease Corp. between 2023-2026.

Ismail stated that any possible arrangement to take additional planes out of vacated delivery slot would not be included in the Air Lease Corp deal and MAG would have to go to capital markets to raise additional funding. (Writing by Lisa Barrington. (Editing by Gerry Doyle).

(source: Reuters)