Cape Times

Absence of new players sees Comair profits soar

- Sizwe Dlamini

COMAIR yesterday reported a rise of more than 50 percent in profits for the year end to June as the company took full advantage of the absence of new players in the aviation industry.

Comair said its profits rose 54 percent and increase after tax to R297 million – up from the R193m recorded during the correspond­ing period last year.

The company said the increase generated yielding earnings a share of 63.7 cents, compared with the 41.5c recorded during the correspond­ing period last year, while headline earnings a share rose to 67c from 36.5c.

Chief executive Erik Venter said the results, including the strong performanc­e of the non-airline operations, supported the airline’s strategic focus. Venter said the weak economy and narrow profit margins in the airline industry had favoured the pursuit of growth from Comair’s non-airline businesses.

He said the strategy had yielded strong performanc­e in travel businesses, including kulula holidays, the Comair Training Centre, the SLOW lounges and the Food Directions catering operation.

“All have performed well and justify further investment,” Venter said. “In the continued absence of meaningful gross domestic product growth in South Africa, our domestic airline-passenger market has yet to expand into its surplus-seat capacity, which constrains industry occupancy levels at below the global average. Aver- age global seat occupancy is 80.6percent as per Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (Iata), while Comair has an average of 75 percent.”

The private airline’s results are in stark contrast with troubled national airline SAA, which recently reported a loss of R734m this year.

Venter said despite inflationa­ry pressure and a 5percent increase in the rand price of fuel, Comair costs remained well contained with a 1 percent increase overall.

He said cash generated from operations also increased 28 percent, resulting in a healthy cash balance of R935m at year end, compared with R1.12 billion last year, after a significan­t investment of R132m in pre-delivery payments towards new aircraft for delivery in 2019. He said income generated by its non-airline brands now constitute­d 20percent of its earnings.

The company declared a 21c dividend.

Crucial Javed Malik, chairperso­n of PAK Africa Aviation, said while Comair’s non-airline operations played a crucial role in the airline’s profit growth, it really did not have much to brag about.

Malik said the lack of new players in the local aviation industry worked significan­tly to assist Comair.

“There were no new entries this year and that worked to their advantage,” he said.

Comair shares closed 0.88 percent lower on the JSE yesterday at R5.60.

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