Business Standard

IndiGo numbers lift off on non-core income

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The stock of IndiGo, India’s largest airline by market share, fell two days in a row after declaring weaker numbers.

Though the airline managed to remain in profit for a consecutiv­e ninth year, analysts say the profitabil­ity rose due to a significan­t rise in other income. For the DecemberMa­rch quarter, IndiGo reported a profit before tax of ~619 crore. A closer look at the numbers suggests a major portion of this was due to nonoperati­ng income, which includes income from investment­s and cash and non-cash income from aircraft and engine manufactur­ers.

Total non-operating income for the quarter was ~443 crore. Excluding other income, profit before tax was ~176 crore; after taxes, it stood at ~124 crore.

Other income for this quarter, which consists of finance income — income from fixed deposits and mutual funds — was ~177 crore. With the rupee strengthen­ing against the dollar, foreign exchange gains due to the weakening currency, coupled with other non-operating income, amounted to around ~83 crore, an analyst said.

“Other income for IndiGo rose sharply by 59 per cent to ~293 crore owing to forex gains of ~82.6 crore,” Vishal Rampuria, an analyst with HDFC securities said in a report.

“Indian aviation companies with around 65 per cent of their costs directly or indirectly linked to the dollar will be the biggest beneficiar­y of rupee appreciati­on. A stronger rupee, coupled with reduction in air turbine fuel prices, bodes well for the aviation companies,” SBI Cap wrote in a research report on April 28.

One more component of the income of IndiGo has been from the sale and leaseback model, which the airline has successful­ly used over the years.

For the quarter, IndiGo’s income from sale and leaseback was ~150 crore. Low-cost carriers across the world have been users of this and leaseback model under which a lessor will purchase the aircraft from the airline and lease it back. This removes the aircraft debt from the airline’s balance sheet and allows it to invest equity for some other purpose.

According to sources, IndiGo makes around $4 million per aircraft under such transactio­ns. As of March, IndiGo had 131 aircraft, of which 17 were owned or on finance lease, while 114 were on an operating lease.

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