An Airbus A380, which was damaged at the Paris Air Show on Monday, will take no further part in demonstrations and has been withdrawn from the show.

The demonstrator of the world’s largest jetliner clipped a building at Le Bourget Airport and damaged its wingtip.

Airbus did recover, however, by announcing further orders for its A320neo aircraft, which has proven to be a particular hit at the show.

Following Monday’s orders from Air Lease and Capital Aviation, CIT Aerospace announced that it had signed a memorandum of understanding with Airbus for 50 of the A320neo family aircraft, with deliveries scheduled to begin in 2016.

The Airbus momentum continued into engine orders, as International Lease Finance signed a $950m order with CFM International for its LEAP engine to power 40 A320neos due for delivery in 2016.

Boeing responded by announcing deals for 43 aircraft from companies including Aeroflot, Air Shuttle and Malaysian Airlines worth $7.2bn.

Meanwhile, GE Aviation and Snecma announced new orders worth in excess of $1.5bn on Tuesday, although Finmeccanica’s AgustaWestland unit said that it expected this year’s orders to fall from last year’s record of $5.7bn.