Web Research
What the Internet Knows About Safran
The Bottom Line from the Web
The filings tell you Safran is firing on all cylinders — record €31.3 billion 2025 revenue, raised 2028 ambitions, dividend up, buyback live. The web adds two facts that don't sit in the URD: on 20 March 2026 the chair of the US House Select Committee on China asked the Pentagon to review Safran's joint ventures with AVIC, which — alongside the legacy 2022 DOJ FCPA declination — is a live governance/regulatory overhang on US defense contracts. And on 18 February 2026 a threat actor claimed to be selling a 1M-row Safran supply-chain dataset (parts, customers, suppliers); the company denied a cyberattack but the integrity question is now in circulation.
What Matters Most
1. US House panel asks Pentagon to review Safran's China JVs
On 20 March 2026 Rep. John Moolenaar (chair, House Select Committee on China) wrote to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth asking for a review of Safran's joint ventures with Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), warning that Safran's "ventures in China are commercial in nature, [but] its work with these AVIC subsidiaries may directly support entities that help advance the CCP's military capabilities." The Pentagon said it would respond directly to Moolenaar. Source: Reuters / Yahoo News, 20 Mar 2026; Global Banking & Finance, 20 Mar 2026.
This is the single biggest non-financial overhang because Safran is also a US DoD contractor. The 2022 FCPA declination (see #6) means Safran has prior compliance obligations the inquiry could reactivate. Material for FY2026/27 if any DoD restriction follows.
2. Collins flight controls/actuation deal closed — Safran becomes global leader, but DOJ forced a divestiture
21 July 2025: Safran finalized the $1.8 billion acquisition of Collins Aerospace's flight control and actuation business, bringing ~4,000 employees, ~$1.55B in 2024 revenue, ~$130M EBITDA, and presence on 180 aircraft platforms. The deal closed only after Safran agreed to divest its own North American actuator business to Woodward, Inc. to satisfy the DOJ Antitrust Division (formal proposed final judgment in U.S. v. Safran S.A. et al. published 02 July 2025 in the Federal Register, 90 FR 29033). Expected $50M annual synergies by 2028; EPS-accretive year one. Sources: FlightGlobal, 21 Jul 2025; Military Aerospace, 22 Jul 2025; Federal Register, 02 Jul 2025.
This is the largest M&A under CEO Olivier Andriès and the second-largest competitive surface (after engines) where Safran now leads. UK CMA also signed off; EU antitrust approval came 04 April 2025. Trimmable horizontal stabiliser actuators (THSAs) for large aircraft were the specific DOJ concern.
3. FY2025 was the strongest year on record and 2028 ambitions were raised
13 February 2026: Safran reported FY2025 revenue of €31.3 billion (vs €27.3B in 2024) and raised its 2028 ambitions. Q1 2026 revenue jumped 18.8% to €8.6 billion driven by LEAP engines and aftermarket, with FY2026 guidance reaffirmed at low-to-mid teens revenue growth, €6.1–€6.2B operating income, and €4.4–€4.6B free cash flow. Cybernews reports adjusted FY2025 revenue at €31.33B (~$37B). Sources: Safran press release, 13 Feb 2026; Seeking Alpha (Bechai), 25 Apr 2026; ad-hoc-news, 15 May 2026.
Q1 2026 beat consensus on civil engines. The combination of record backlog, strong cash generation, and raised long-term targets sets the bull case the market is partly pricing.
4. April 2026 aerospace stock rout — Safran lost ~20% from peak
Bloomberg (24 Apr 2026): "Europe's Aerospace Stocks Rack Up Biggest Weekly Losses in Years." The sell-off spilled from airlines into engine makers and suppliers. Safran's price tracked from €315 (17 Apr 2026) to a €265 low (04 May 2026) — a ~16% drawdown over three weeks — before partially recovering to ~€300 by early June. Seeking Alpha's Dhierin Bechai (25 Apr 2026) noted Safran was "down nearly 20% since my last report" against an S&P up 4.7%. Sources: Bloomberg, 24 Apr 2026; Seeking Alpha, 25 Apr 2026; Eulerpool price history.
The pullback wasn't Safran-specific — it was a sector reset on Middle East tension and airline demand fears. The technicals tab flagged a "death cross" on 08 May 2026.
5. AGM 2026 — €3.35 dividend approved, buyback continues
27 May 2026: Annual General Meeting approved a €3.35 per share dividend for FY2025 and confirmed board membership changes; the company simultaneously disclosed continued share-buyback activity in late May 2026. Sources: Safran AGM materials, 2026; Webdisclosure, 26 May 2026; ad-hoc-news, 28 May 2026.
Total return commitment intact; share capital totals 418,344,626 shares at 31 Dec 2025 with 530,198,467 theoretical voting rights (double-voting structure).
6. Cybersecurity incident — threat actor offers 1M-row Safran dataset
18 February 2026: Cybernews reported that a threat actor on a hacker forum claimed to be selling more than 1 million rows of Safran data including "order details, customer names, emails, phone numbers, account numbers, ERP references, supplier codes, part descriptions, shipping information, and carrier or delivery details." Safran denied a cyberattack, but Cybernews notes Safran had a prior 2023 data-leak incident from a system misconfiguration. The risk: poisoning of defense supply chains via counterfeit-part identifiers. Source: Cybernews, 18 Feb 2026.
For a tier-1 aerospace/defense supplier this is a national-security signal even if the leak proves overstated. Pair with the AOG Technics fake-parts case (#10) — defense-supply integrity is a sticky theme.
7. SPI divested at a €(244)M pre-tax loss; Aircraft Interiors strategic review continues
05 February 2026: Kingswood Capital Management completed the acquisition of Safran Passenger Innovations (SPI), Safran's in-flight entertainment unit (~$460M revenue, ~740 employees, 3 sites). The unit was renamed RAVE Aerospace. The FY2025 release disclosed a €(244)M pre-tax capital loss on the sale. Safran is separately exploring the sale of up to €1.5 billion ($1.76B) of cabin-interior assets (overhead bins, galleys, fittings), retaining seats. Sources: Nasdaq/RTT News, 11 Dec 2025; Simply Wall St update, Dec 2025–Feb 2026; Ainvest, 05 Sep 2025.
This continues the unwind of the 2017 €8.5B Zodiac Aerospace acquisition. The Cabin and Seats franchise has incurred goodwill impairments every couple of years; the FY2025 results carried an additional €423M impairment excluded from adjusted ROCI.
8. India revenue expected to triple to over $3.4B by 2030
Reuters, late November 2025: Safran expects its annual India revenue to triple to more than $3.4 billion by 2030, tied to Rafale engine production opening in India and broader LEAP supply-chain localization. Adds to the Morocco landing-gear plant announcement (13 Feb 2026) and reflects the broader supply-chain de-risking strategy. Sources: Reuters, 25 Nov 2025; Reuters, 13 Feb 2026 — Morocco plant.
9. CFM's GTF competitive advantage is intact through 2026
The Pratt & Whitney GTF powder-metal recall keeps ~835 GTF-powered aircraft in storage at end-October 2025 (a 33% fleet storage rate), up from 748 at mid-year. RTX has guided cumulative gross financial impact of $6–7B; rework runs well into 2026. This is the durable competitive tailwind for the CFM LEAP franchise on A320neo. Sources: FlightGlobal, 23 Dec 2025; AirInsight, Sep 2023 update.
CFM's enhanced LEAP-1A HPT blades were certified December 2024 (with 1B certification expected 2025) — designed to double time-on-wing in hot/dusty environments. The combination should preserve LEAP's share lead while GTF works through its rework cycle.
10. Ryanair MoU adds long-term annuity to LEAP/CFM56 aftermarket
10 February 2026: Ryanair and CFM signed a long-term Memorandum of Understanding covering services for Ryanair's entire fleet of ~2,000 CFM56 and LEAP engines, including spare-parts and parts-repair support for two new Ryanair MRO shops launching in Europe from 2029. O'Leary publicly described it as a "multi-billion-dollar spares support agreement." Source: Safran press release, 10 Feb 2026.
This is what the Propulsion aftermarket annuity looks like in practice. Coupled with new RPFH (Rate-Per-Flight-Hour) contracts (e.g., Air Travel China, $992M, 12 years), it secures decades of installed-base revenue.
Recent News Timeline
What the Specialists Asked
Governance and People Signals
Olivier Andriès — CEO since 1 January 2021. Age 64. École Polytechnique / École des Mines de Paris. Was CEO of Safran Aircraft Engines 2015–2020 and CEO of Safran Helicopter Engines 2011–2015. Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur (2018). 2022 variable compensation €1.07M (134% of fixed pay) on 109% financial-objective achievement.
Ross McInnes — Chairman since April 2015. Age 72. Prior roles: Deputy CEO of Safran (2011–2015), Vice-Chairman of Macquarie Capital Europe, CFO of Thales, CFO of Eridania Beghin-Say. The 2017 letter from TCI's Chris Hohn was addressed to McInnes — historical context for chairman/activist relations.
Pascal Bantegnie — CFO since 2021. Age 56.
Insider holdings are ~16–17% (Yahoo Finance), with double-voting rights structure (418.3M shares vs. 530.2M theoretical voting rights at 31 Dec 2025) amplifying the French State's effective voting power.
Governance overhangs to monitor:
Pentagon / China JV inquiry — 20 Mar 2026 letter from House Select Committee on China is the active item. No formal restriction yet.
2022 DOJ FCPA declination — Safran agreed to continued cooperation; declination is conditioned. The 2026 China-JV inquiry could plausibly reopen scrutiny on the related-but-distinct China activity surface.
Cyber/data integrity — Feb 2026 alleged data leak (Safran denies); 2023 misconfiguration was previously reported by Cybernews. Defense-supply-chain integrity is the systemic concern.
Aircraft Interiors / Zodiac strategic review — €(244)M SPI loss realized; up to €1.5B more interiors under review; one-off impairments continue. Watch for a clean exit signal.
Industry Context
The aerospace cycle the web sees is straightforward: civil aviation rebound is real, narrowbody backlogs are at record levels, and defense budgets are rising. The structural twist is that Pratt & Whitney's GTF rework keeps ~33% of the GTF fleet grounded into 2026, handing CFM (Safran/GE) a multi-year competitive tailwind that the market has partly priced but not fully — Bechai's "disconnect" thesis turns on exactly this.
A second structural shift is the post-LEAP architecture decision (mid-2030s). CFM's RISE open-rotor demonstrator is the public bet; it would re-up Safran's narrowbody monopoly if Airbus and/or Boeing pick the architecture. RTX/Pratt is working on a competing next-gen ducted turbofan. This is the largest binary in the Safran story and the market does not currently price it.
Defense exposure is being repriced upward across European primes ("EU must improve defense strategy and unite against Russia, Safran says" — CEO Andriès on CNBC, Dec 2024). The Rafale export annuity (India $3.4B+ by 2030, Egypt, Croatia, Greece, Indonesia, UAE orders) is a real beneficiary; the M88 ramp at Évry-Corbeil and the new Le Creusot capacity (announced Jan 2026) are the visible industrial response.
The April 2026 stock rout was a sector reset — Bloomberg called it "Europe's Aerospace Stocks Rack Up Biggest Weekly Losses in Years" — and the Bechai bull case argues the disconnect between fundamentals (LEAP attach rates, Rafale exports, Collins integration, net cash) and the post-drawdown price is the variant perception worth owning.