Singapore Air profit drops 36%
Singapore Airlines, the world's largest airline by market value, on Thursday reported a better-than-expected 36 percent fall in quarterly profit and warned of weakness in its advance passenger bookings.
"The financial turmoil around the world and weak consumer confidence are impacting demand for air transportation," said Singapore Air in a statement. "Although advance bookings for the immediate next quarter are holding up reasonably well, there are signs of weakness beyond that," said Singapore Air, whose $9.9 billion market value tops U.S.-based budget carrier Southwest Airlines and Japan's All Nippon Airways.
But the airline has seen some relief on the cost-side as jet fuel traded in Singapore plunged 52 percent to $87 per barrel from July's peak in line with a slide in crude oil, allowing the company to cut fuel surcharges this week.
Singapore Air said July-September net profit was S$324 million ($218.6 million) compared with S$508 million a year ago, although the results were better than the S$297 million estimate of four analysts polled by Reuters.
Revenues for the airline, which derives about half of its sales from premium and business travellers, were S$4.4 billion compared with S$3.97 billion a year ago.Singapore Air said it will pay an interim dividend of 20 Singapore cents per share for the six months to September 2008 period.
Currency challenge
"With fuel and aircraft-related payments in U.S. dollars, the sharp appreciation of the U.S. dollar and the concurrent depreciation of the Euro, UK pound and Australian dollar, all major revenue currencies for the company, is an adverse development," the airline said.
The global economic downturn and higher costs have also hit other airlines. SIA's Asian rival, Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific, warned on Wednesday that potential losses on fuel hedging would contribute to "disappointing" results for 2008. Last week, Cathay said it planned to dispose of five jets from its fleet and warned of slowing bookings.
Air France-KLM in late October became the first major European airline to issue a profit warning since the financial storm broke, while industry group IATA announced bleak traffic figures for carriers worldwide. Singapore Air will hold a briefing on its results at 0900 GMT on Friday.
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