China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Currency hit proves drag on airlines

China’s top three carriers seen posting loss of combined $1.3 billion on weaker yuan

- By BLOOMBERG

China’s three biggest airlines are poised to report losses totaling 8.5 billion yuan ($1.3 billion) from currency swings this year as a weaker yuan proves a drag amid rising traffic and cheaper fuel. The silver lining: the losses are narrowing.

Flagship carrier Air China Ltdmay face 3 billion yuan in foreign-exchange losses, while China Southern Airlines Co, Asia’s biggest by passengers, is looking at a potential hit of 4 billion yuan and China Eastern Airlines Corp may lose about 1.5 billion yuan, according to Capital Securities Corp. That compares with a combined loss of 16.2 billion yuan in 2015. The carriers are scheduled to announce their firsthalf earnings this week.

Astrategy to trim dollar-denominate­d debt may be paying off as the airlines seek to shield their earnings from declines in the yuan, according to Capital Securities. A weaker local currency typically hurts companies that borrow in dollars to pay for imports such as aircraft. An unexpected­devaluatio­n of the yuan last year led to an 18-fold surge in currency losses in 2015 for the three carriers.

“The yuan’s devaluatio­n raised foreign exchangelo­sses and interest costs for the airliners,” said Castor Pang, head of research at Core-Pacific YamaichiHo­ngKong.

“The yuan has stabilized after a tough second quarter and this will ease the burden on their bottom line. The second-half should be much better.”

The local currency depreciate­d 2.3 percent against the dollar in the six months through June, making it the worst performer in Asia.

The yuan, trading at about 6.67 against the greenback, is likely to weaken about 2 percent more by the end of 2017, according to the average estimate of forecasts in a survey.

Shares of Air China and China Eastern have declined about 2 percent and 6 percent this year in Hong Kong, compared with a 13 percent slide in the Bloomberg Asia Pacific Airlines Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd, the marquee Hong Kong-based airline that is facing competitio­n from its mainland peers, has slumped 15 percent.

Jet fuel that cost about 30 percent less on average in the first half compared to a year earlier provided a buffer as the carriers now enjoy the benefits of cheap oil, helped by their policy not to hedge.

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