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Garuda sees profit in 2018 on cost cuts

Indonesian carrier reducing flight turnaround time

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JAKARTA: PT Garuda Indonesia is targeting a return to profit next year after a loss in 2017 as the flag carrier works to reduce expenses and operations improve.

The airline is predicting a profit of US$75mil in the second half ending December but won’t be able to post a profit for the 12-month period following a larger loss in the first six months of the year, chief executive officer Pahala Mansury said. Losses in the first half totaled US$284mil, he said.

The Indonesian carrier is boosting aircraft utilisatio­n by reducing flight turnaround time and cutting expenses, steps that would help Garuda turn in a profit next year, Mansury said.

The executive, who took the helm six months ago, said Garuda aims to bring down its cost per available seat kilometer to 5.5 US cents to 6 US cents, from 6.7 US cents.

“We have been increasing the utilisatio­n rate of our aircraft and will continue to do so,” Mansury said in an interview in Jakarta on Oct 18.

“This will be the key factor to determine whether we are profitable in future and whether our financials improve.”

By comparison, cost per available seat kilometer across Singapore Airlines group, which includes budget carrier Scoot, was 6.83 Singapore cents (5 US cents) in the latest fiscal quarter ended June, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Garuda is in discussion­s with planemaker­s to defer aircraft delivery, Mansury said, without giving specific details.

In 2015, the carrier committed to 60 planes from Boeing valued at US$10.9bil at list prices and 30 aircraft from Airbus valued at US$9.1bil, before discounts that are custom-

— Reuters

ary in the industry for large orders.

The company is restructur­ing its low-cost carrier Citilink and converting debt in the unit to equity, the CEO said. In addition, Garuda plans to boost revenue from other aviation-related businesses such as aircraft maintenanc­e and its hotel subsidiari­es.

Mansury said Garuda is leveraging on Indonesia’s geographic position to get more overseas customers. Revenue from internatio­nal flights expanded almost 15% in the first half from a year earlier, while the share from domestic travel fell.

Garuda shares gained as much as 1.8% to 334 rupiah yesterday, trimming its year-todate drop to 1.2%. That compares with a 24% gain in the Bloomberg Asia Pacific Airlines Index in 2017.

Starting next month, the airline will fly non-stop to London from Jakarta after years of setbacks, allowing it to tap around 700,000 passengers who travel between Australia and the UK each year on the so-called “Kangaroo route.”

The group is targeting a net income margin of 1% to 2% in 2018, compared with 0.21% last year. “Garuda Indonesia’s situation has improved,” Mansury said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Soaring again: The airline is predicting a profit of US$75mil in the second half ending December.
Soaring again: The airline is predicting a profit of US$75mil in the second half ending December.

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