Bangkok Post

Price war hits Qantas profit in the first half

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SYDNEY: Australian carrier Qantas Airways posted a 7.5% hit to its first-half earnings yesterday, impacted by lower fares, greater competitio­n and empty seats.

Underlying profit before tax fell to A$852 million (US$656 million) for the six months ending December 31, but just beat the airline’s own guidance.

That compares to A$921 million in the same period of 2015.

Revenue was also down to A$8.18 billion, 3.3% below the previous six months.

Qantas, which has turned itself around in recent years on the back of aggressive cost-cutting, said it was facing increased competitio­n on internatio­nal routes and a soft domestic market.

“The internatio­nal market is tough because of capacity growth and lower fares,” said chief executive Alan Joyce.

“Qantas Internatio­nal is not immune from those pressures. But the work we’ve done on removing costs and making the business more efficient means Qantas Internatio­nal is outperform­ing its peers in the region.”

“Cheaper oil has led to strong capacity growth on internatio­nal routes, pushing fares down and impacting all major airlines,” Joyce said.

“Our focus is to stay discipline­d on capacity, keep downward pressure on costs, and introduce game-changing improvemen­ts like the Dreamliner and high-speed Wi-Fi.”

The airline is due to receive the first of eight Boeing Dreamliner­s next year and open the first direct flights between Australia and Britain.

“Our transforma­tion programme has built a strong, sustainabl­e business that generates returns throughout the economic cycle,” Joyce added.

Domestic and internatio­nal performanc­e both suffered with freight also down, although all parts of the group remained in profit.

Qantas announced an interim dividend of seven cents.

Shares had risen ahead of the announceme­nt on expectatio­ns of a good financial result and jumped a further 5.21% to $3.74 by close on the better-thanexpect­ed figures.

CMC Markets chief strategist Michael McCarthy said the profit fall was forecast on the back of higher fuel, but the market response was surprising.

“Investors may like the narrative around the Dreamliner­s, as it is unlikely they were excited by capacity and traffic projection­s of plus 1-2%,” he told AFP.

In the year to June 30, Qantas posted a record net profit of A$1.42 billion and announced its first payout to shareholde­rs in seven years.

That followed cuts of A$2 billion to costs and restructur­ing with thousands of jobs axed and dozens of aircraft sold or orders deferred.

Qantas offered no profit guidance yesterday, saying the short-term outlook depended on oil prices and foreign exchange movements as well as global market conditions.

 ?? AFP ?? Qantas Airways CEO Alan Joyce, left, and chief financial officer Tino La Spina test out the premium economy seat for the airline’s new 787-9 Dreamliner after a press conference in Sydney yesterday.
AFP Qantas Airways CEO Alan Joyce, left, and chief financial officer Tino La Spina test out the premium economy seat for the airline’s new 787-9 Dreamliner after a press conference in Sydney yesterday.

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