Business Standard

Indigo posts ₹1,290 crore pre-tax loss

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The country’s largest airline, Indigo, will not pay any dividend to its shareholde­rs for the financial year ended 2020, the company has announced. This, along with other cost-saving steps, would help the company generate liquidity of around ~4,000 crore to withstand the

Covid-19 crisis, it said on Tuesday.

Although unsure of revival in demand,

Chief Financial Officer

Aditya Pande said there was a slight uptick in forward bookings after the lockdown was relaxed.

The company reported a consolidat­ed pre-tax loss of ~1,290 crore in the March quarter as compared with a profit of ~626 crore in the year-ago period.

This was due to a surge in cost amid tepid revenue growth. Loss at the net level stood at ~870 crore as compared with a ~596 crore profit in the year-ago quarter. The company’s consolidat­ed income rose 4.5 per cent year-on-year to ~8,635 crore for the March quarter, while costs soared by nearly a third to ~9,924 crore.

Despite the government allowing 30 per cent capacity, the airline has only been able to operate at 20 per cent as various quarantine measures by states have made people reluctant to fly, according to Indigo CEO Ronojoy Dutta. “However, as of now we see a lot of pent-up demand but it is very difficult to give a long-term picture,” Dutta said. He expects the demand on internatio­nal sector to be strong when it restarts.

Among the many steps that will help the airline generate savings include cost renegotiat­ion with suppliers and vendors, deferment of supplement­ary lease rentals to lessors and restructur­ing employee cost.

“We have prided our self on a strong balance sheet. Given the need to preserve cash, we will not pay any dividend this year and the above steps will help to generate more liquidity,” Dutta said.

“We have approached all our suppliers and vendors to reduce the purchase service cost and I should tell you that we have already successful­ly renegotiat­ed many of those,” he added.

However, he refused to give any future guidance. “Given the volatility, it is difficult to give any revenue guidance for the future,” he said.

The airline is however upbeat on cargo during the lockdown. “We have used 10 aircraft purely to ferry cargo even inside the cabin and we are pleasantly surprised by the result. We are studying if we should continue with this initiative,” Dutta said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India