Manila Bulletin

Singapore Airlines posts 62% jump in Q3 net profit, sees tough market

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SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Singapore Airlines posted a 62 percent jump in quarterly profit, its best thirdquart­er earnings in seven years, but forecast challengin­g market conditions due to rising fuel prices and aggressive competitio­n from rivals.

The carrier, a benchmark for Asia's premium airlines, made S$286 million ($216.29 million) in the three months ended Dec. 31, up from S$177 million a year earlier when writedowns had cut into earnings.

Operating profit rose 13 percent to S$330 million during the quarter as growing passenger numbers and higher cargo revenue offset a decline in ticket prices and higher fuel costs.

The airline, like Hong Kong-based rival Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd., has been undertakin­g a transforma­tion program designed to cut costs and to boost revenue amid competitio­n from Chinese and Middle Eastern rivals and low-cost carriers.

Singapore Airlines' group revenues rose 6 percent to S$4.1 billion in the third quarter, with improvemen­ts in all business lines although average ticket prices fell by 3.1 percent.

The carrier said that market conditions remained challengin­g, with competitor­s adding significan­t capacity in key markets with aggressive pricing.

"These challengin­g market conditions have been exacerbate­d by recent fuel price movements," the airline said. "Fuel prices have been trending higher and volatility is expected to persist in the months ahead as the market continues to balance demand and supply."

Singapore Airlines said it had hedged 40.7 percent of its jet fuel requiremen­ts for the fourth quarter at $65 a barrel, which compares to the spot jet fuel price of $75 a barrel.

The airline said its transforma­tion program was "well on track" with new initiative­s being actively explored. Those announced to date include a major investment in digital technology, shifting some routes to low-cost subsidiary Scoot and adding more seats to its Airbus SE A380 superjumbo­s.

Singapore Airlines' flagship fullservic­e airline unit contribute­d S$155 million to operating profit in the third quarter, up from S$151 million a year earlier.

The SilkAir regional airline unit reported a 37 percent fall in operating profit to S$19 million, due in part to a 12.3 percent decline in yield, or average fares. Scoot posted a 48 percent rise in operating profit to S$43 million as yield rose and it filled a higher percentage of seats.

The cargo division's operating earnings jumped 66 percent to S$88 million amid a global rebound in the air freight market.

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