Business Standard

AIR INDIA IN THE RED ON INCREASED AIRCRAFT RENTAL

Operationa­l loss ~460 cr in July-Sept and outlook also uncertain due to demonetisa­tion; temporary factors, says management

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER New Delhi, 11 December

State-owned carrier Air India, which according to Prime Minister Narendra Modi is on a recovery path, suffered an operating loss of ~460 crore in the July- September period. This is the second consecutiv­e loss making quarter for the airline, after a ~246-crore operationa­l loss in Q1 of FY17. If compared on a yearly–basis, the airline’s operationa­l losses increased manifold by 55 per cent, from ~296 crore during the same period last year. ARINDAM MAJUMDER writes

State-owned Air India, which according to Prime Minister Narendra Modi is on a recovery path, suffered an operating loss of ~460 crore in the July September period, after another ~246 crore of losses in the financial year’s first quarter, April-June.

Compared on a yearly basis, operationa­l losses increased manifold by 55 per cent, from ~296 crore during the same period last year.

However, airline executives said an additional lease rental of ~200 crore on nine Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s was the reason for ending in the red this quarter. To clear past loans, Air India had formally sold nine B-787s to a Singapore-based lessor, which it then took back on lease under a sale and lease back agreement. In this arrangemen­t, the seller of an asset leases it back from the purchaser on a long-term basis and continues to use it.

Additional­ly, a weak rupee worsened things, with an estimated loss of around ~100 crore to a fluctuatin­g exchange rate. So, operationa­l expense rose 7.5 per cent to ~5,275 crore.

“Our performanc­e actually improved if compared to the previous year but an unfavourab­le exchange rate made things difficult,” said a senior executive.

The executive said for the current quarter the airline was able to more than halve its total loss to ~508 crore, a decline of 57 per cent from ~1,197 crore in the correspond­ing period last year. With a benign fuel price, private airlines also improved their numbers, despite a competitiv­e pricing scenario. Market leader INDIGO’s profit increased by 24 per cent to ~140 crore, SPICEJET doubled its to ~58.9 crore and Jet Airways’ increased by 2.5 per cent to ~85 crore.

“Air India suffers from legacy issues, past loans. So, private airlines are not a like-to-like comparison. We are concentrat­ing on our own performanc­e and improving every day,” a second executive said. The airline has accumulate­d debt of around ~40,000 crore, due to long-term loans taken for aircraft purchase. The finance ministry has agreed to an additional infusion of ~860 crore in the supplement­ary budget for FY17, after the airline warned that lack of money support would hurt its recovery.

The executive said despite pressure on yields and a decline of around seven per cent in average fare, revenue increased by 2.8 per cent. “This is because we are now flying more, our aircraft utilisatio­n has increased and productivi­ty has increased,” he said.

Minister of state for aviation Jayant Sinha had earlier told Parliament that AI’s performanc­e would improve in the second half of the year, due to a pick-up in traffic. However, the management feels adverse impact of demonetisa­tion might disrupt the hope of ending the year with a profit in operations.

“Many people have cancelled their advance bookings and we are seeing a decline in new bookings by almost 10 per cent. So, the forecast for the next quarter remains uncertain,” an official said.

According to the airline’s turnaround plan, it was projected to see operating profit of ~1,086 crore in 2016-17.

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