Air Canada `confident' government support will be coming
Despite posting a massive fourth-quarter loss, Air Canada is increasingly confident the federal government will soon come through with a financial aid package for the beleaguered airline industry.
The net loss was $1.16 billion, or $3.91 per diluted share, Air Canada said Friday in a statement. A year earlier, in the last quarter before COVID -19 affected operations, the carrier had net income of $152 million, or 56 cents a share. Air Canada burned through $1.38 billion of cash, or about $15 million a day, in the last three months of 2020.
Canada's biggest airline has shrunk its network, retired older aircraft and eliminated about 20,000 jobs — more than half of its workforce — to comply with various government-imposed travel restrictions since the pandemic began. On Tuesday, the company said it would lay off another 1,500 employees this month and suspend 17 U.S. and international routes.
After reducing capacity by 67 per cent in 2020, Air Canada said Friday it plans to implement a further 85-per-cent cut in the first quarter of 2021 compared with the first quarter of 2019. Its net loss for all of 2020 was $4.65 billion, or $16.47 a share.
“While undeniably grim, results such as these are being reported the world over in our industry due to the impact of COVID-19,” outgoing CEO Calin Rovinescu said Friday as he bemoaned “extremely onerous” government measures.
Faced with restrictions such as a ban on non-essential foreign travellers, global operations from just four airports, no service to the
Caribbean or Mexico through April and mandatory quarantines upon arrival, Air Canada “continues to be subjected to perhaps the strictest COVID-19 preventative regime in the Americas,” Citigroup analyst Stephen Trent said in a note to clients.
A “patchwork of new and ever-changing travel restrictions” is “stifling travel demand, impacting our ability to operate or plan, and even preventing us from formulating reliable guidance,” Rovinescu said on a conference call.
Though Canada — unlike all other G7 member nations — has so far resisted calls to help airlines navigate through the pandemic, talks with the federal government offer some promise.
“Basically the discussions have picked up the pace,” Rovinescu told financial analysts. “I'm more confident that there can be an outcome now than I was, say, a month ago.”
Still, “even if Canada's government comes through with aid, it seems that an international route recovery could take a long time,” said Trent, the Citigroup analyst.
Canada would do well to pattern its aid package after the U.S., which offered its carriers five-year loans and a payroll support program, said Air Canada chief financial officer Michael Rousseau, who will replace Rovinescu as CEO Monday.
The company says a recent study of international travellers, conducted with McMaster Health Labs and the Greater Toronto Airports Authority, found that testing can “facilitate the safe relaxation of quarantines,” and that a 14-day quarantine is unnecessary for more than 99 per cent of passengers.