Arab Times

Lufthansa see revenues drop 80%, no full recovery until 2024

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German airline group Lufthansa reported a net loss of 1.49 billion euros ($1.77 billion) for the second quarter, when the pandemic essentiall­y shut down passenger traffic, and issued a sobering forecast for demand to not reach pre-virus levels before 2024.

“Especially for long-haul routes there will be no quick recovery,” CEO Carsten Spohr said in a statement accompanyi­ng the quarterly earnings statement.

Lufthansa said it carried 96% fewer passengers during the April-June quarter and experience­d an 80% drop in revenue, to 1.9 billion euros from 9.6 billion euros in the same quarter a year earlier. Most of that revenue came from the company’s cargo and maintenanc­e businesses, not from flying passengers.

The company is the recipient of a 9 billioneur­o government bailout to enable it to keep flying and says it will emerge from the pandemic as a smaller airline with 22,000 fewer jobs due to a cost-cutting program.

The company slashed operating expenses during the quarter with the help of government wage support programs for employees put on shorter hours or no hours. It also canceled non-essential expenditur­es.

The cargo division made a profit of 299 million euros, up from 9 million a year ago.

Lufthansa has started flying short-haul vacation flights but in July its offerings reached only around 20% of last year’s level. It said short and medium haul capacity would increase to 40% in the third quarter and longhaul capacity to 20%. It forecast an operating loss for the rest of the year and said it expected long-haul routes – normally a key source of earnings. (AP)

 ??  ?? A parked Lufthansa aircraft is seen through a hangar
window at the airport in Frankfurt, Germany on July
30, 2020. (AP)
A parked Lufthansa aircraft is seen through a hangar window at the airport in Frankfurt, Germany on July 30, 2020. (AP)

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