New Straits Times

SINGAPORE AIRLINES Q2 PROFIT NEARLY TRIPLES

Cargo business boosts profit to S$190m from S$65m previously

-

SINGAPORE

SINGAPORE Airlines said its second-quarter net profit nearly tripled on the back of stronger operating results, helped by a rebounding cargo business, but yields remained under pressure as competitor­s increased capacity.

The carrier, a benchmark for Asia’s premium airlines, earned S$190 million (RM589 million) in the three months to September 30, up from S$65 million a year before.

“Headwinds remain as competitor­s mount significan­t capacity in key markets. Yields continue to be under pressure, despite some stabilisat­ion in recent months,” said the airline on Tuesday.

The airline and Hong Kongbased rival Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd have been struggling against mounting global competitio­n from Chinese and Middle Eastern rivals and low-cost carriers, with no domestic flights to underpin their earnings.

Passengers travelling with Singapore Airlines increased by 2.3 per cent in the second quarter and the carrier’s second-quarter operating profit rose to S$232 million, from S$109 million a year earlier.

Singapore Airlines itself contribute­d S$170 million to group operating profit in the quarter, up from S$79 million a year earlier, while the SilkAir unit’s operating profit fell 17.6 per cent to S$14 million, and that of low-cost subsidiary Scoot’s declined by 75 per cent to S$2 million.

The cargo division reported an operating profit of S$26 million, rebounding from an operating loss of S$11 million a year ago amid a strong recovery in the freight market globally.

Singapore Airlines is undertakin­g a three-year transforma­tion plan designed to make its business more competitiv­e after reporting a surprise fourthquar­ter loss in May.

Last week it said it would spend US$850 million (RM3.6 billion) to increase the overall seat count by up to a quarter in its fleet of A380 superjumbo­s and halve the number of first-class seats to combat lower airfares and boost competitiv­eness. Reuters

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Singapore Airlines says it will spend US$850 million to increase the overall seat count by up to a quarter in its fleet of A380 superjumbo­s and halve the number of first-class seats to combat lower airfares and boost competitiv­eness.
BLOOMBERG PIC Singapore Airlines says it will spend US$850 million to increase the overall seat count by up to a quarter in its fleet of A380 superjumbo­s and halve the number of first-class seats to combat lower airfares and boost competitiv­eness.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia