National Post

Air Canada sees higher bookings as COVID-19 travel curbs ease

- Sanjana shivdas allison lampert and

Air Canada forecast increased bookings for domestic and U.s.-bound flights in the winter as travel restrictio­ns ease after reporting a bigger-than-expected quarterly loss on Friday.

Canada’s largest carrier predicted slower cash burn as travel comes back, although bookings overall remain below pre-pandemic levels.

“We are seeing steadily increasing bookings for the domestic, transborde­r and Atlantic markets and to sun destinatio­ns for the coming winter,” chief executive Michael Rousseau told analysts. “In fact, for the next winter sun travel, future bookings during some weeks in June were ahead of the same period in 2019.”

Canada will allow fully vaccinated U.S. tourists to enter the country from Aug. 9, after the pandemic forced an unpreceden­ted 16-month ban.

Air Canada reported a net cash burn of about $8 million per day during the second quarter, lower than earlier projection­s. It expects that number to improve to between $3 million and $5 million per day in the third quarter.

Carriers are adding flights, putting pressure on fares in some markets.

While domestic pricing is more challengin­g, on internatio­nal routes “the environmen­t is quite stable,” chief commercial officer Lucie Guillemett­e said while predicting a fall return in corporate travel.

Cargo flights, added during the pandemic, will be a more important part of the carrier’s future, the airline said.

In April, Air Canada reached an aid deal with the country’s federal government that would allow it to access up to $5.9 billion in funds.

Rousseau said the airline would decide later this year whether to opt out of the government’s financing facilities.

Excluding items, Air Canada lost $3.03 per share, according to Refinitiv data. Analysts on average expected a $2.76 loss.

The airline’s net loss was $1.17 billion, or $3.31 per share, in the quarter ended June 30, compared with a loss of $1.75 billion, or $6.44 per share, a year earlier.

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