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China’s Cathay crackdown bodes badly for HK firms

Carrier emerging as corporate fall guy

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SINGAPORE: For more than half a century, Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd has been Hong Kong’s gateway to the world, its mix of British heritage and Asian high-altitude luxury bridging the city’s colonial past with its Chinese location. But it’s that unique cultural blend that has ensnared the carrier in an increasing­ly out-of-control political uprising sweeping through the streets.

After months of anti-Beijing demonstrat­ions in the city, Cathay is emerging as the corporate fall guy as it struggles to navigate a path between the demands of the mainland and employees sympatheti­c to the uprising.

Since last Friday, the carrier’s been rebuked by China’s regulator, boycotted by stateowned companies and excoriated by the nation’s biggest bank. Its stock also hit a 10-year low.

Add the 272 scrubbed flights and 55,000 stranded passengers after protesters occupied Hong Kong’s airport and this week has shaped into one of the worst in the carrier’s history. But those service disruption­s may be the least of Cathay’s worries, with China’s actions against the 72-year-old carrier a taste of the less autonomous future awaiting the airline - and other Hong Kong companies.

China’s warning

“Cathay is only the start,” said Shukor Yusof, founder of aviation consultanc­y Endau Analytics in Malaysia. “China is sending a message to other corporatio­ns in Hong Kong that the same thing can happen to them.”

The orders by China’s aviation regulator last Friday laid bare the airline’s vulnerabil­ities, and its conundrum: Staff who support illegal protests are banned from Cathay services to the mainland.

And all Cathay crew need special approval to enter Chinese airspace, a crackdown that also affects many flights heading to the US and Europe. Though Cathay doesn’t disclose a breakdown of its mainland China business, flights originatin­g from there and Hong Kong account for about half of the firm’s revenue.

Cathay has spent the week trying to make amends.

Merlin Swire, chairman of the airline’s biggest shareholde­r, went to Beijing to meet with aviation officials on Monday, and Cathay fired two pilots who’d been suspended in relation to the protests. A Cathay representa­tive declined to comment on the company’s relationsh­ip with China, referring to an Aug 12 message to employees where the carrier said it is obliged to comply with regulation­s from the nation’s aviation authoritie­s. Cathay also said it won’t tolerate illegal activities.

On Tuesday, Cathay stock tumbled to its lowest close in more than 10 years. It’s rebounded somewhat since as Cathay worked to undo the damage of its link to the protests, but the stock’s 6.8% drop this year still puts it among the 10 worst-performing carriers on the Bloomberg World Airlines Index.

Union strike

The unrest in Hong Kong initially targeted a controvers­ial proposed extraditio­n bill. As the dominant local airline, Cathay was affected mostly because the protests put off tourists. But its troubles deepened after Cathay pilot and flight-crew unions took part in a general strike on Aug 5.

Days later, the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China stepped in.

Cathay’s actions, or lack thereof “have led to a severe threat to aviation safety, created negative social impact and increased the risk of flying from Hong Kong to the mainland,” the regulator said.

On top of subjecting employees flying to the mainland to checks, CAAC ordered Cathay to submit a plan to increase safety and tighten security by Aug 15.

All the informatio­n handed over by Cathay so far has met requiremen­ts, according to the regulator on Thursday. Almost simultaneo­usly, Chinese state-run companies began blacklisti­ng Cathay. China Huarong Internatio­nal Holdings Ltd, a unit of the country’s largest bad-debt manager, told workers to choose another airline for business and even personal trips, people familiar with the matter said. Finance-to-brewing conglomera­te China Resources National Corp was said to give similar directions to its staff. China Citic Bank Internatio­nal Ltd, a Hong Kong-based unit of the nation’s largest state-run conglomera­te, sent a message to its workers on Wednesday, saying it was to ensure travel safety.

Then, on Tuesday, a brutally bearish research report landed on Cathay from staterun Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. analyst Zhao Dongchen predicted Cathay stock would slump by about one third to HK$6 in 12 months, a level it last reached in 2001. Zhao criticised Cathay’s leaders for “poor crisis management” that would cause “irreversib­le damage” to the airline’s brand.

No other analyst comes close to Zhao’s depth of pessimism on Cathay, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The political upheaval comes at an already difficult time for Cathay. The airline’s leading position in Hong Kong, Asia’s busiest hub for internatio­nal traffic, has long been under threat from regional rivals. A new airport in Beijing is due to open next month, potentiall­y siphoning off more business.

Throw in sluggish global economic growth, the US-China trade war and a fragile business emerging from a turnaround, and the prospects are increasing­ly gloomy.

But Cathay’s problems aren’t necessaril­y China’s concern. The company seems an obvious target for Chinese authoritie­s as the protest movement shows no sign of stopping, said Paul Yong, an analyst at DBS Bank in Singapore.

“It’s really an issue of symbolism,” said Yong. “It’s long been an icon of Hong Kong. It meant it attracted more attention from the Chinese authoritie­s.”

China and Britain have waged a war of words over the unrest in Hong Kong.

The UK government in June threatened “serious consequenc­es” if China failed to honor an agreement that guarantees freedoms in Hong Kong.

China, in turn, accused Britain of meddling. For many, Cathay is an emblem of the years Hong Kong was governed by Britain, until 1997. The airline is almost half-owned by the two-century-old conglomera­te headed by the UK’s Swire family, while Chief Executive Officer Rupert Hogg and Chairman John Slosar are long-time Swire lieutenant­s. The carrier’s second-largest shareholde­r? Staterun Air China Ltd.

In some respects, Cathay appears to have given in.

Though Slosar said this month the company “wouldn’t dream of telling” staff what to think about issues such as Hong Kong’s protest movement, the company changed its tune after drawing scrutiny from China’s aviation regulator.

“We must and will comply,” Hogg said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Corporate turbulence: A Cathay Pacific plane lands at Hong Kong airport after it reopened following clashes between police and protesters, in Hong Kong, China. Since last Friday, the carrier’s been rebuked by China’s regulator, boycotted by state-owned companies and excoriated by the nation’s biggest bank. Its stock also hit a 10-year low. — Reuters
Corporate turbulence: A Cathay Pacific plane lands at Hong Kong airport after it reopened following clashes between police and protesters, in Hong Kong, China. Since last Friday, the carrier’s been rebuked by China’s regulator, boycotted by state-owned companies and excoriated by the nation’s biggest bank. Its stock also hit a 10-year low. — Reuters

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