Toronto Star

A LOW SWOOP

Plans for transborde­r service by low-cost subsidiary to be announced this week

- ROSS MAROWITS THE CANADIAN PRESS

Labour dispute, fuel prices lead to $20.8M loss for WestJet,

WestJet Airlines Ltd. says its ultra-low-cost Swoop airline will soon begin transborde­r service as it looks to regroup from a “deeply disappoint­ing” second quarter when it was hurt by the impact of a pilot strike threat, intensifie­d competitio­n and soaring fuel costs.

Details about routes and the official start date will be announced later this week.

Reports suggest the Calgary- based airline will fly to Las Vegas, Phoenix and Florida destinatio­ns — including Orlando, Tampa, and Fort Lauderdale — from low-cost airports in Canada such as Hamilton and Abbotsford, B.C.

“We are clearly concentrat­ing on those airports to help migrate the five million Canadians who are crossing the border to Buffalo and Bellingham and make sure that there’s less need to travel on North American counterpar­ts,” WestJetchi­ef ex- ecutive officer Ed Sims said Tuesday during a conference call. The airline recently received its third of six Boeing 737-800s to be delivered this year and is looking at possibly speeding up plans to expand to 10 planes by the fall of 2019.

“There will be opportunit­ies to be profitable on those routes that WestJet with a higher CASM (costs) is not able to operate,” Sims said.

WestJet said it was forced to offer discounts that partially offset five fare increases this year to restore passenger confidence following a threatened pilots strike that hurt demand before it was resolved through mediation.

“To build flow-on benefits like ancillary revenues, we had to be aggressive both to recover those guests who would otherwise have booked away or booked with a competitor but also to compete with this almost unpreceden­ted level of peak season capacity,” Sims added.

WestJet’s stock fell about 10 per cent in midday trading after the company reported a rare loss of $20.8 million in the second quarter and adjusted some of its 2018 expectatio­ns to reflect the impact of higher fuel costs.

WestJet said its second quarter fuel cost was up nearly 31per cent from a year ago, at 81 cents per litre, and that it expects the current quarter’s cost will be even higher at between 83 and 85 cents per litre.

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