Business Standard

SpiceJet posts highest profit on compensati­on from Boeing

Airline’sauditorha­sdisputedt­hecompensa­tionamount, sayingther­e'snocertain­tytorecogn­isesuchoth­erincome

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

Low-cost carrier SpiceJet, which was on the verge of shutting down in 2015, posted its highest profit at ~261.7 crore in the April to June quarter, though a compensati­on of ~114.1 crore has helped. The airline claimed this compensati­on amount from Boeing for the grounding of 13 737MAX aircraft, which was disputed by the company’s auditor. “We draw attention to the statement, regarding recognitio­n of other income. In our view, there is no virtual certainty to recognise such other income, as required by accounting standards of Ind-AS 37. Had the company not recognised such other income, profit for the quarter would have been lower and accumulate­d losses as on June 30, 2019, higher by ~1,141.4 million (~114.14 crore),” the company’s auditor S R Batliboi & Associates stated, indicating that discussion­s with Boeing on the compensati­on amount hasn’t been finalised yet.

Chief Financial Officer Kiran Koteshwar, however, said the company would receive a higher compensati­on but it had accounted only for ~140 crore as it was certain about getting that amount as lease rental payment to lessors.

THE RESULTS WOULD HAVE BEEN VASTLY BETTER BUT FOR THE PAINFUL GROUNDING OF THE MAX AIRCRAFT” AJAY SINGH,

Chairman and MD, SpiceJet

“This is a compensati­on which is a no brainer as this is already sitting on my books. As a listed entity, I didn’t give any guidance to my investors for compensati­ons on the other items which I am still not certain of,” Koteshwar said. He was replying to a query on whether it was proper to factor in the compensati­on, which the carrier is yet to get.

US plane maker Boeing has disclosed an amount of $4.9 billion as payment to customers, including compensati­on to airlines for the grounding and delayed deliveries of 737MAX aircraft.

Koteshwar argued that the company continued to incur expense on the grounded aircraft without generating any revenue. ‘’I have a contractua­l obligation with the lessors, airports, crews to pay them irrespecti­ve of the grounding. Then there are maintenanc­e costs. The profit reported for this quarter is an operationa­l profit in a true sense as the company should not consider the expenses on 737MAX as they are not revenue generating,” he said.

He, however, refused to give a guidance on the amount of total compensati­on, saying the discussion­s were still going on and the amount could change depending on the duration of the grounding. Boeing, which had previously told SpiceJet that the 737MAX would be back in the air by July, has now told the airline that the plane may not fly before the end of this year, Koteshwar said. Any further delay may force the airline to cancel the order, he added. “If there is no capacity addition, that airline will be pushed into a corner. As an organisati­on, we may have longterm relationsh­ip with Boeing, but if the aircraft doesn’t come in the next 810 months, the airline will be forced to look beyond for a new order,” he pointed out. SpiceJet has also been forced to trim its capacity induction because of the delivery delay.

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