The Peterborough Examiner

Transat stock nosedives, hurricane season dampens quarterly results

- ALICJA SIEKIERSKA Asiekiersk­a@postmedia.com

Transat A.T. Inc. reported a strong quarter on Thursday, with revenues increasing by more than 10 per cent from 2016, but warned that destructiv­e storms could impact results going forward as the company continues to evacuate passengers along the path of Hurricane Irma.

The Montreal-based travel company saw its revenues jump from $663.6 million in 2016 to $733.2 million in the three-month period ending July 31, thanks largely to strong travel demand, increased capacity and higher selling prices across all the markets it serves. Transat’s quarterly net income nearly tripled from $9.4 million last year, or 26 cents per diluted share, to $26.6 million, or 72 cents per diluted share.

“Our results are extremely satisfying and the outlook for the fourth quarter is encouragin­g, despite the recent surge in fuel price and subject to impacts from the hurricanes on some destinatio­n programs,” said chief financial officer Denis Pétrin in a conference call with analysts Thursday.

Transat stock fell 8.4 per cent to $9.23 on the Toronto Stock Exchange around mid-day.

Transat said it expects operating costs in its upcoming quarter to be around the same amount as last year at about $70.8 million. However, the company said the flurry of severe storms may impact the next quarterly results and increase the cost of operations, particular­ly Hurricane Irma, which has forced the company to evacuate travellers from its various sun destinatio­ns.

“The hurricane season has started strongly this year, with Harvey and Irma, and we are monitoring this extensivel­y as it may have an influence for the end-of-summer season, specifical­ly for summer destinatio­ns,” Pétrin said.

Transat announced earlier this week that it had sent 10 flights to Cuba and another 10 to the Dominican Republic to evacuate vacationer­s. The company said in Thursday’s call it will also send additional flights to Florida in the coming days.

“This is an operation that obviously adds cost to our operations,” Pétrin said. However, he downplayed how substantia­l the impact would be on the quarterly results.

“The sun destinatio­n program is coming at the end of the season, it’s really in the back-end,” he said. “We don’t want to comment on the impact the hurricane will have. We don’t know. But it is the end of the season. As we speak, we’re not talking about major dollar impact on the (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on, amortizati­on and rent costs).”

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS

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