Gulf Today

Norwegian Air passenger income up

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OSLO: Norwegian Air’s revenue per customer grew less than expected in July and the company filled slightly fewer seats than analysts had predicted during the peak summer season, sending its shares down almost 8%.

Europe’s third largest budget carrier has warned that the global grounding since March of the Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, which make up 11% of Norwegian’s fleet, may hamper its plans to return to profitabil­ity this year.

The company’s yield, a measure of revenue per passenger carried and km flown, rose to 0.51 Norwegian crowns ($0.0572) in July from 0.45 crowns in June, lagging the 0.54 crowns expected by analysts in a Reuters poll.

Norwegian filled 93.5% of its available seats last month, up from 93.0% a year earlier but lagging an average analyst forecast of 93.8%, its monthly traffic data showed on Tuesday.

Norwegian late last year announced plans to curb its rapid capacity growth and cut costs to preserve cash and stem losses from its operations. It has also raised 3 billion crowns from shareholde­rs to boost its balance sheet.

The company’s capacity expansion, as measured by available seat km (ASK), peaked at 51% growth year-on-year in June 2018 and has since declined, hiting 5% in July, slightly above the 4% percent that analysts had forecast.

“Following a period of significan­t expansion and investment­s, the growth is slowing down, which is in line with our strategy of moving from growth to profitabil­ity,” interim CEO Geir Karlsen said in a statement.

“The figures also show that passengers travel longer distances and a higher load factor. This means that more people choose Norwegian when they are travelling, not least on interconti­nental flights,” he added.

 ?? File/reuters ?? ↑ An aircraft of Norwegian Air at an airport in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
File/reuters ↑ An aircraft of Norwegian Air at an airport in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

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