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Garuda bets on recovery

Indonesia relaxing virus curbs may spark revival

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s flag carrier is betting on further easing of social distancing rules to spark a revival in travel for work and leisure after the coronaviru­s pandemic pushed the airline to seek a debt restructur­ing and government aid to stay afloat.

PT Garuda Indonesia’s passenger traffic has risen to 16% of its capacity after the government lifted a temporary ban on non-essential travel last month, president director Irfan Setiaputra said in an interview.

Travel demand may further improve if authoritie­s open up popular tourist destinatio­ns like Bali, he said.

“There have been continuous improvemen­t in consensus among analysts on when the industry will fully recover,” Setiaputra said.

“In May, they were saying it will happen in 2023 but as of last week it has been moved forward to 2022. If the industry can fully recover only in 2022, then Garuda will not be able to make it.”

Garuda reported a net loss of Us$120mil in the first quarter and was forced to restructur­e Us$500mil of debt last month to survive the hit from the pandemic that’s hurt airlines worldwide.

The carrier has cut employee salaries and renegotiat­ed aircraft lease agreements to survive the travel slump and secured a credit line from the government.

The airline has no plan to seek further financial assistance from government or its other shareholde­rs even though its cash position is “extremely challengin­g,” Setiaputra said.

The government, which owns 61% of Garuda, has extended 8.5 trillion rupiah (Us$590mil) from the budget to meet the airline’s working capital requiremen­ts.

“The problem faced by the industry right now is not a technical problem, but a perception problem,” Setiaputra said.

“How to create a perception that will encourage public to fly again. Our research shows that people are having a wait-and-see attitude. In other industries this attitude is fine, but for us it’s dragging our costs.”

Lion Air Group, Garuda’s main rival in the Indonesian market, said on Thursday it had cut an unspecifie­d number of jobs due to the business uncertaint­y caused by the coronaviru­s.

Indonesia still remains under the grip of the pandemic with new cases hitting a daily record of 1,624 on Thursday.

The country has the most number of infections and fatalities in South-east Asia, forcing authoritie­s to impose mobility restrictio­ns and mandatory virus testing before flights, discouragi­ng fliers.

Garuda shares gained as much as 2.4%, set for the first back-to-back gain since June 8. The stock has stumbled 50% this year even after soaring 36% in the second quarter. — Bloomberg

“Our research shows that people are having a wait-andsee attitude. In other industries this attitude is fine, but for us it’s dragging our costs.” Irfan Setiaputra

 ??  ?? Looking up: Passenger traffic has risen to 16% of its capacity after the government lifted a temporary ban on non-essential travel last month. — Reuters
Looking up: Passenger traffic has risen to 16% of its capacity after the government lifted a temporary ban on non-essential travel last month. — Reuters

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