Business World

Qantas Airways expects record annual profit despite rising fuel bill

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SYDNEY — Australia’s Qantas Airways Ltd. said on Wednesday it expected a 10.7% rise in full-year underlying pre-tax profit, despite an expected A$200million ($149.7-million) increase in fuel costs.

The country’s largest airline forecast record underlying profit before tax in the range of A$1.55 billion to A$1.60 billion ($1.16 billion-$1.20 billion) for the fiscal year ended June 30, compared with A$1.4-billion profit a year earlier.

The guidance was in line with the average estimate of A$1.55 billion of eight analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Group revenue for the third quarter ended March 31 rose 7.5% to A$4.25 billion. Revenue per available seat kilometer, a measure that combines the fares paid and the percentage of seats filled, was 6% higher.

“Qantas is on track to deliver another record full-year result even though we’re facing a A$200-million increase in our total fuel bill in FY18,” Chief Executive Alan Joyce said in the airline’s thirdquart­er update.

Mr. Joyce added that the company was seeing robust results from each of its business units, which he attributed to “broadly positive” trading conditions.

Qantas said it had ordered six additional Boeing Dreamliner­s for its internatio­nal fleet, that would enable the retirement of six 747s.

In February, the airline reported a record half-year underlying profit before tax of A$976 million due to cost cuts and hikes in domestic fares.

For the third quarter, revenue per available seat kilometer rose 8% in the domestic market and was 5.2% higher in the internatio­nal market.

Domestic capacity, measured by available seat kilometers, rose 1.9% in the third quarter, while internatio­nal capacity was 2.3% higher. —

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