The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Surge in 2Q profit masks underlying challenges for AirAsia

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AIRASIA Group reported a surge in second-quarter net profit on the back of a tax benefit, but operating profit fell sharply as fuel and maintenanc­e costs increased.

The Malaysian budget carrier said on Thursday that net profit for April-June rose by 147 per cent to RM361.8 million (US$88 million). However, that was mainly thanks to a one-off tax benefit from the sale of aircraft last year and masked underlying challenges, particular­ly for long-haul arm AirAsia X, which swung into the red.

While group revenue rose 10.3 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier to RM2.62 billion, net operating profit fell nearly 18 per cent to RM324.8 million.

AirAsia’s load factor, or the percentage of seats filled, fell by 3 percentage points to 86 per cent on average at its operations in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippine­s that are consolidat­ed for accounting purposes.

Capacity at those airlines expanded by 12 per cent, outpacing growth in passenger volumes.

Higher fuel prices weighed, particular­ly on AirAsia X Bhd where they increased by around 25 per cent from a year earlier. The unit reported a secondquar­ter loss of RM57.5 million, reversing a profit of RM47.4 million a year earlier.

AirAsia plans to add five more aircraft to its fleet through operating leases in the second half of 2018 and deploy them to AirAsia X Malaysia and AirAsia X Thailand, it said in a statement.

A month ago, AirAsia X placed an order for 100 A330neo passenger jets worth US$30 billion at list prices, with deliveries scheduled to start in the second half of 2019. AirAsia X is Airbus’ biggest customer for the long-haul widebody aircraft.

Group chief executive officer Tan Sri Tony Fernandes said in a series of tweets in July that AirAsia X will pursue an IPO of its Thai arm “soon” as it looks to restructur­e itself into a group holding company along the lines of its parent AirAsia Group.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Higher fuel prices weighed, particular­ly on AirAsia X Bhd where they increased by around 25 per cent from a year earlier.The unit reported a second-quarter loss of RM57.5 million, reversing a profit of RM47.4 million a year earlier.
— Reuters photo Higher fuel prices weighed, particular­ly on AirAsia X Bhd where they increased by around 25 per cent from a year earlier.The unit reported a second-quarter loss of RM57.5 million, reversing a profit of RM47.4 million a year earlier.

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