Toronto Star

WestJet takes ‘substantia­l’ hit from 737 Max jetliner

CEO says fuel are costs up, routes cut

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

WestJet chief executive Ed Sims says the grounding of the Boeing 737 Max is having a “substantia­l negative impact” on the airline, even as the company reported robust earnings in its first full quarter without the fuel-efficient jetliner and on the cusp of its acquisitio­n by Onex Corp.

In a phone interview, Sims said the grounding — now expected to continue at least through November — has forced WestJet to increase spending on fuel and cut its routes.

Sims declined to quantify the financial hit, saying he is in discussion­s with Boeing about the “substantia­l loss” of WestJet’s 13 Max 8s, which comprise about 10 per cent of the carrier’s seat capacity.

WestJet nonetheles­s beat analysts’ ex

pectations with a 380 per cent profit increase year over year to $44.3 million last quarter, as a boost in passengers bumped up revenue 11 per cent to $1.21 billion.

Analyst Cameron Doerksen of National Bank of Canada says in an investor note the grounding will hinder capacity growth and raise expenses for Canadian airlines, but that lower jet fuel costs and a stronger Canadian dollar may help offset those headwinds.

On Friday, Alberta’s superior court approved the $3.5-billion deal between WestJet and Onex Corp., which expects to complete the buyout following further regulatory green lights later this year.

Authoritie­s across the globe banned the Boeing aircraft from their skies last spring after two crashes — in Indonesia in October and Ethiopia in March — killed all 346 passengers aboard, including 18 Canadians.

WestJet says it found replacemen­t aircraft for about 700 of the 1,000-plus 737 Max departures scheduled in June, the final month of the second quarter. Sims said a sale of regional carrier Encore or budget offshoot Swoop are not on WestJet’s agenda at the moment, and that no layoffs of its 14,000 employees will stem from the buyout. The airline has also grappled with unionizati­on and higher costs, which have offset some of its revenue growth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada