(FILES) The logo of Aerospace company Airbus is displayed at the Pavillon Airbus during the 55th edition of the International Paris Air Show at the Paris Bourget Airport, in Le Bourget, suburb of Paris on June 17, 2025. (Photo by Bertrand GUAY / AFP)
Paris: Shares in Airbus fell more than 10 percent on Monday in Paris following media reports that quality problems with fuselage panels had delayed delivery of some its top-selling A320 aircraft.
Airbus did not immediately respond to queries by AFP. Shares in the company were down 10.24 percent at around 1200 GMT, while the Paris market was showing a small drop. It subsequently recovered some of the losses.
The reports of the new problem came after a separate incident in which Airbus last week said some 6,000 of its A320 planes should not fly again until a software upgrade was made following an incident in the United States.
The announcement initially raised concerns that hundreds of planes would need to be grounded for long periods, but Airbus said Monday that fewer than 100 planes remained immobilised.
On October 30, a JetBlue-operated A320 aircraft encountered an in-flight control issue due to a computer malfunction apparently caused by solar radiation affecting the equipment.
The plane suddenly nosedived as it travelled between Cancun in Mexico and Newark in the United States, and pilots had to land in Tampa, Florida.
Analysts at Deutsche Bank said the fact that Airbus had not updated its guidance for aircraft delivery this year suggested the impact of the software update was still being evaluated or had been contained.
Produced since 1988, the A320 is the world's best-selling aeroplane. Airbus sold 12,257 of the aircraft by the end of September compared with the sale of 12,254 Boeing 737s.