Business Standard

Jet Airways posts ~13.26 bn Q1 loss

- ANEESH PHADNIS

Jet Airways on Monday said it will seek capital infusion and sell the stake in its loyalty programme after reporting a net loss of ~13.26 billion in the April-June (Q1) quarter of 2018-19 (FY19). This is the airline’s thirdhighe­st quarterly loss.

On August 9, Jet had deferred its quarterly results amid difference­s with its auditors, leading to enquiries by stock exchanges and the market regulator. The auditors did not modify their opinion and reiterated that the airline’s future was dependent on raising capital and generating sustainabl­e cash flows.

The airline blamed increases in costs and low fares for the loss. Rival Indi Go’s profit fell 97 per cent in the quarter; Spice Jet has made a loss of ~0.38 billion.

Jet’s unit costs (for transporti­ng a seat per km) increased 8.7 per cent while its unit revenue (for transporti­ng a seat per km) declined 3.9 per cent.

“The rise in the price of fuel, a depreciati­ng rupee, and a resulting mismatch between high fuel prices and low fares adversely affected the Indian aviation industry, including Jet Airways,” said Chief Executive Officer Vinay Dube in a statement.

Consolidat­ed revenue rose 2 per cent to ~63.12 billion; expenses increased 24.7 per cent to ~76.38 billion. No exceptiona­l item was reported. Jet’s worst loss was in the January-March quarter of 2014-15, because of write-offs on investment in subsidiary Jet Lite.

Jet Airways Chairman Naresh Goyal said the board considered infusion of capital and monetisati­on of the airline’s stake in its loyalty programme for long-term financial health and sustainabi­lity.

The loyalty programme, which Jet co-owns with Etihad, has 8.5 million members. It is managed through an associate company, earning revenue of ~6.2 billion and a profit of ~1.7 billion. Jet owns 49.9 per cent in the loyalty business.

The board also approved a ~20-billion costsaving plan over the next two years that will cover maintenanc­e, sales and distributi­on, fuel, debt reduction and increased productivi­ty. It said it is also targeting 3-4 per cent growth in unit revenue through initiative­s in network, pricing and sales while improving products and services. The airline also said it will lease its ATR fleet for improved profitabil­ity. “Jet’s unit cost is 40 per cent higher than IndiGo’s and 64 per cent higher if we exclude fuel but it only manages to price its average fares 15 per cent higher. The management targets to trim non-fuel cost by 12-15 per cent over two years, but this may not be enough and needs to be managed carefully as service quality and staff morale might be compromise­d,” said Corrine Png, chief executive officer of Crucial Perspectiv­e, a Singapore-based transport research firm.

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