Awesome job Delta!!!

woodreau

Well-Known Member

TLDR
Do the acceptance and conformity checks on new build European built Airbus aircraft outside the US. Do a few flights outside the US before bringing it into the US.

Poof. magic.

It’s no longer a new plane and not subject to the 15% tariffs because you’re importing a “used” airbus and not a new Airbus.

Delta Air Lines Inc. is sidestepping millions of dollars in U.S. tariffs on European jetliners by initially routing them far outside the country to such places as Amsterdam, Tokyo and El Salvador.

The U.S. carrier has taken delivery of seven European-built Airbus SE planes since President Donald Trump’s levies took effect in October 2019. Rather than flying them home as it had in the past, Delta has based the aircraft overseas. The decision, coupled with the definition of new planes in the tariff rules, has kept the jets from being considered imports even though some of them regularly enter the U.S.

Avoiding the tariffs has saved Delta, Airbus’s biggest U.S. airline customer, precious cash while customs records show that rival carriers have been charged the duties. Every dollar counts for an industry struggling to cut costs amid a collapse in demand caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Like other major U.S. carriers, Delta has received billions of dollars in government aid while parking planes, reducing flights and trimming jobs as airlines steel themselves for a long slump.

“We have made the decision not to import any new aircraft from Europe while these tariffs are in effect,” Delta said in a statement to Bloomberg News. “Instead, we have opted to use the new aircraft exclusively for international service, which does not require importation.”
Circuitous Route
In the case of a new A321, Delta avoided tariffs by not importing it to the U.S.

The Delta strategy rests on language that classifies planes as used once they’ve flown for any reason other than testing and delivery. Tariffs on new-plane imports then don’t apply, even if the aircraft are soon flying to the U.S.

While Delta wouldn’t discuss the financial details, the savings are likely to be significant. Based on aircraft list prices, the anti-tariff strategy has saved the company as much as $270 million, although the true amount is surely much smaller given the steep discounts that are customary on jetliner sales.
Delta shares, down 35% this year through Monday, dropped 3.3% to $36.74 at 9:42 a.m. in New York amid broad declines in U.S. airlines. Airbus fell less than 1% to 89.77 euros in Paris.

The implications go far beyond Delta’s bottom line. The airline’s efforts also illustrate how the Trump trade wars have prompted U.S. companies to reconfigure their business practices to avoid tariffs, often in ways that make them less efficient.
Long-Running Dispute
The Trump administration imposed tariffs on $7.5 billion of annual imports from the European Union after the World Trade Organization ruled in favor of the U.S. in a long-running case over subsidies to Airbus. In addition to levies on French wine and Scotch whisky, large civil aircraft faced a 10% duty that was later increased to 15%.

If a major customer like Delta is able to continue buying planes without paying the tariffs, Trump’s attempted punishment loses impact. The U.S. also risks losing leverage in negotiations to resolve a trans-Atlantic dispute over aircraft subsidies that has hit Boeing Co.as well as Airbus.
The EU won a WTO case of its own against subsidies for Boeing and this month announced tariffs on $4 billion in U.S. goods. Removing that irritant is one of the items high on the agenda for Joe Biden’s incoming administration as the next president tries to repair ties with European allies that were frayed under Trump.
Since the U.S. imposed the punitive tariffs in October 2019, it has sought to collect more than $55 million on planes imported from France, Germany, the U.K. and Spain, the countries subject to the higher levies, according to data provided by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
The CBP is barred from disclosing what it collects from individual companies, said Nathan Peeters, a spokesman for the agency. A spokesman for U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, who ordered the tariffs, didn’t respond to a request for comment.
U.S. Loophole
In the case of the Airbus tariffs, the Trump administration appears to have created the very loophole Delta may be using.


The definition of a new plane -- included in an annex attached to the original 2019 order that imposed the tariffs -- doesn’t appear to have applied before that, said Jennifer Hillman, a former senior U.S. trade official now at the Council on Foreign Relations. Nor was the definition changed in subsequent orders increasing the tariff rate, she said.

“If they had wanted to, they could have amended that definition,” Hillman said. “So I don’t think the U.S. has much standing to complain if planes are coming in with more hours than just testing and delivery and not paying additional duties.”
According to the U.S. Trade Representative, a new aircraft is one with “no time in service or hours in flight other than for production testing” or for delivery to the U.S. That suggests the plane is no longer new once it’s flown a non-U.S. route for any other purpose.


“It might just be sloppy writing of the law, which would be consistent with the current administration’s aviation trade policies,” said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace analyst at Teal Group. Alternatively, he said, Delta “may just be running out the clock on the Trump administration, since the Biden administration is less likely to fight trade wars with allies.”
Jamaica, El Salvador
The Delta planes include a single-aisle Airbus A321 jet and six twin-aisle aircraft normally used for longer flights.
The A321 was built in Hamburg, Germany, and first sent to El Salvador -- a hub for aircraft maintenance operations -- where it stayed more than two weeks, according to Flightradar24. The jet was then used on routes to Canada and parked in Mexico during the height of the virus lockdown. Since August, it has ferried passengers between Montego Bay, Jamaica, and Atlanta, where Delta is based.
The wide-body planes, assembled at an Airbus factory in Toulouse, France, were first sent to either Amsterdam or Japan, where some had Wi-Fi antennas installed at Tokyo’s Narita airport. Two A350s delivered in September have been flying to cities including Detroit, Atlanta, Amsterdam, Paris and Seoul. Of the four remaining A330s, three are parked in Tokyo and Nagoya, Japan. The other has traveled mainly between Seattle and either Seoul, Tokyo or Amsterdam.
While Delta says it isn’t importing planes from Europe, the tariffs collected by the U.S. indicate that other airlines have been charged. Publicly available data on imports of European-built aircraft show that the operators include such major Airbus customers as American Airlines Group Inc.and JetBlue Airways Corp. Both carriers declined to comment, as did Airbus.
‘Remain Competitive’
Last month, Delta delayed $5 billion in Airbus deliveries until after 2022 as the carrier prepared for years of weak travel demand and lower revenue because of the pandemic. About $2 billion of the planes had been scheduled to be handed over this year.


But for the jetliners it does want, Delta has made no secret of its aversion to Trump’s levies. The airline said in a February regulatory filing that it was pursuing strategies to minimize the impact.
In its statement to Bloomberg this month, the company said its actions enable its planes to be “treated the same as our foreign competitors’ aircraft, which allows us to remain competitive in the global markets we serve.”


— With assistance by Julie Johnsson, Charlotte Ryan, and Samuel Dodge
(Updates Delta, Airbus shares in seventh paragraph.)
 
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TLDR
Do the acceptance and conformity checks on new build European built Airbus aircraft outside the US. Do a few flights outside the US before bringing it into the US.

Poof. magic.

It’s no longer a new plane and not subject to the 15% tariffs because you’re importing a “used” airbus and not a new Airbus.

This is not a new thing. In the early 2000s, USAirways purchased some of the CRJs PSA was operating from the leasing company. They had pilots take the plane 20 miles off shore and hold for an hour while the paperwork was signed and thus avoided paying some large tax fee.
 
Exactly. ^ nothing new. As a rampy, while learning to fly, airlines used to fly brand new 737s across the border so save $$$ from the tax man.


I guess, it helps make the kool aid go down smoother if you’re unaware of the dozens of other airlines doing the same thing.
 
It isn't just international, it is very common to "take delivery" of an airplane in certain states to minimize tax liability.
 
This is not a new thing. In the early 2000s, USAirways purchased some of the CRJs PSA was operating from the leasing company. They had pilots take the plane 20 miles off shore and hold for an hour while the paperwork was signed and thus avoided paying some large tax fee.

I worked a 777 off LAX that went out past the ADIZ towards FICKY, did some paperwork, and then turned around and flew to Nigeria. Thought it was absolutely crazy but apparently it’s a relatively common practice.
 
Money is typically the reason why brand new airplanes are flown to free trade zones in China rather than a fleet base or national fleets registered in Bermuda on delivery.

I'm sure the same will happen with EU carriers now that the WTO authorized 4bn in tariffs on new Boeing aircraft.
 
It isn't just international, it is very common to "take delivery" of an airplane in certain states to minimize tax liability.

Yep. When I worked for a dealer, we frequent signed paperwork in Kansas. Also, it was common to move a ton of airplanes to Oklahoma on December 30th and fly them back on Jan 2nd to avoid a state tax of some sort.
 
One management company flew for requested that I flew our client's airplane over certain stated on given daye for specific tax purpose.
 

TLDR
Do the acceptance and conformity checks on new build European built Airbus aircraft outside the US. Do a few flights outside the US before bringing it into the US.

Poof. magic.

It’s no longer a new plane and not subject to the 15% tariffs because you’re importing a “used” airbus and not a new Airbus.
Yeah, and 90% of California-residing, California-utilized aircraft were, ahem, "purchased in Nevada".

Scammers gonna scam; It's what they do! Save Big Money by voting for financial law enforcement and switching to Geico.


Open Letter to the dispossessed, poor, put-upon, undervalued, over-taxed, but-I-just-want-a-fair-chance-at-being-great citizens of America...

Dear Effed:

Please understand, EVERY time a big corporation or 0.1% individual DOESN'T pay taxes ... YOU pay more taxes.
 
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Ever see how many Credit Card companies are incorporated in DE.

Not just credit card companies either. NWA inc the holding company for Northwest Airlines was also based in Delaware. When I was an AMT at NWA we took a concession (paycut) in 1993 and the mechanics part of the IAM at the time negotiated a swap with preferred stock for the paycuts ( the pilots got common stock) so we were supposed to get a set price per share after a maturation period of 10 years. Well 10 years came and went but NWA did not want to pay us 35 dollars a share that was agreed upon. So a corporate friendly judge in Delaware threw out the agreement said nah NW you don't have to honor that.. And people wonder why after we changed unions and went AMFA that we didn't want to play ball with NW management anymore.
 
Careful with that one!

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There's at least one EDV idiot that did it and MN busted him for 10 years of tax evasion. He complained to me as a volunteer as if the union was going to protect him from dodging state taxes. Ya can't help stupid.
 
European Delivery used to be available for almost every premium car manufacturer, although BMW and Audi have ended their programs recently. There may not be a saving in tariffs, but you could drive it on a decent road before coming to the US.
 
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