Hull Daily Mail

£300m loss for transport giant

HULL TRAINS DETERMINED TO BOUNCE BACK AS PARENT GROUP’S PERFORMANC­E SLUMPS

- By DAN KEMP dan.kemp@reachplc.com @1_Dankemp

TRANSPORT giant Firstgroup has seen shares tumble after flagging doubts over its future amid the coronaviru­s pandemic as passenger numbers plunged and it slumped to a £300m loss.

Shares in the bus and rail firm, which runs train franchises such as South Western Railway and Avanti West Coast, as well as openaccess operator Hull Trains, plummeted as much as 18 per cent after it revealed a “material uncertaint­y” over its ability to continue as a going concern.

It saw pre-tax losses widen to £299.6m for the year to March 31 from losses of £97.9m the previous year after booking a raft of charges including a £21.5m hit for the Covid19 crisis.

The group said passenger numbers across its UK and internatio­nal services plummeted by around 90 per cent in March as countries were placed into lockdowns.

It said ongoing guidance to limit travel and social distancing measures will continue to have a “significan­t impact on our service capacity and financial performanc­e”.

The firm has tapped into the UK’S Covid Corporate Financing Facility for £300m, with support also expected in the US for its Greyhound coach arm.

It warned over the risks surroundin­g state support schemes and a recovery in demand among cautious passengers, but stressed it had “adequate” resources to carry on operating for the next 12 months.

Chief executive Matthew Gregory said: “We do not yet know the rate and extent of demand recovery, nor how long restrictio­ns or social distancing will be in place.

“Nor do we know how government and customer support might taper, although it’s clear that government­s and customers understand the key role that our services play.

“The importance of public transport to society has never been more clearly demonstrat­ed, and we will continue to take all necessary measures to enable the group to emerge from this unpreceden­ted situation in a robust position.”

Hull Trains has not restarted operations since the pandemic, with pleas for help not answered.

“It invested £60m in a new fleet ahead of the lockdown, with 130 jobs on the line.

Results showed First Group’s bottom line was also hit by a £186.9m impairment charge for its Greyhound coach business in the US, which it has been struggling to sell.

The firm has since put its entire North American business up for sale, including the First Student and First Transit businesses, following pressure from an activist investor. But it admitted that the coronaviru­s crisis has slowed the sale process.

Transport expert Gerald Khoo, of Liberum, said the full-year results showed a bigger-than- expected impact from the pandemic in the final few weeks of trading.

He said: “Support from government­s and customers has been crucial to allowing the group to remain cash-generative in the first quarter.

“We expect this support to continue, but any wavering of such support is a key risk.”

 ??  ?? A Hull Trains service at Paragon Interchang­e
A Hull Trains service at Paragon Interchang­e

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