For personal use only

Similar documents
QANTAS HALF YEAR 2015 FINANCIAL RESULTS 1

For personal use only

Media Release. Qantas Group Full Year 2017 Financial Result 1. Sydney, 25 August 2017

For personal use only

Record Result. 2006/07 Full Year Results Investor Presentation. Moved on successfully following bid. Profit before tax % to $1,032 million

QANTAS ANNOUNCES PROFIT RESULT YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2009

QANTAS DELIVERS STRONG FIRST HALF RESULT DESPITE HIGHER FUEL BILL

2004/05 Full Year Results Presentation to Investors

Qantas Airways Limited Alan Joyce, CEO Qantas Airways. Macquarie Australia Conference 3 May 2013

2003/04 Full Year Results Presentation to Investors

Media Release QANTAS RESULTS FOR THE HALF YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2004 HIGHLIGHTS. Fully franked interim dividend of 10 cents per share

Media Release HIGHLIGHTS QANTAS RESULTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2005

QANTAS ANNOUNCES PROFIT RESULT HALF-YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2009

Significant strategic developments announced today

QANTAS RESULTS FOR THE HALF YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2005 HIGHLIGHTS

QANTAS RESULTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2000 HIGHLIGHTS. Net profit before tax of AUD$762.8 million, up AUD$100.3 million, 15 percent on last year

QANTAS HALF YEAR 2015 FINANCIAL RESULTS 1

Media Release QANTAS RESULTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 JUNE 2006 HIGHLIGHTS

Recovery on track, continued strengthening in most segments. Record Jetstar and Frequent Flyer earnings highlight value of portfolio

Building procurement capability through transformation. Jane Harley, Chief Procurement Officer Qantas Group

The Qantas Group A Strong, Sustainable Future Alan Joyce, CEO Qantas Airways. Macquarie Australia Conference 4 May 2012

For personal use only

SYDNEY, 23 August 2012: Qantas Group today announced Underlying Profit Before Tax of $95 million for the year ended 30 June 2012.

QANTAS 2012/13 FULL YEAR FINANCIAL RESULTS

Virgin Australia Holdings Limited (ASX: VAH) H1 FY18 Results 1

2014 Half Year Results Virgin Australia Holdings Limited 28 February 2014

Air China Limited Announces 2009 Annual Results

Airport forecasting is used in master planning to guide future development of the Airport.

Overview. > Normalised earnings* before taxation of, up 30% > Statutory earnings before taxation of, up 40% > Statutory net profit after taxation of

Qantas Airways Investor Briefing

2007/08 Full Year Results Investor Briefing

Queensland Tourism Aviation Blueprint to 2016

Air China Limited Announces 2010 Interim Results

REAUTHORISATION OF THE ALLIANCE BETWEEN AIR NEW ZEALAND AND CATHAY PACIFIC

RESEARCH NOTE. Qantas Group Ltd Neutral

QANTAS ANNOUNCES STRONG FULL YEAR PROFIT, SHAREHOLDER RETURN & DREAMLINER ORDER 1

FULL YEAR OPERATING PROFIT RISES TO $259 MILLION 25 CENTS SPECIAL DIVIDEND PROPOSED OUTLOOK REMAINS CHALLENGING

Air China Limited Announces 2010 Annual Results

Qantas Group - Positioned for Growth and Sustainable Returns

Building Long Term Shareholder Value

AIR CANADA REPORTS THIRD QUARTER RESULTS

2012 Result. Mika Vehviläinen CEO

Thank you for participating in the financial results for fiscal 2014.

Qantas Airways Limited

UBS Australian Transport Conference 31 March 2004

WEAK FOURTH QUARTER CAPS FULL-YEAR PROFIT AT $1.06 BILLION

Net Debt, $m 1, ,733.7

American Airlines Group Inc.

Financial overview. Adjusted operating cash flow* Annual dividend (excluding special dividend) Dollar movement. Percentage

NEWS RELEASE ON FINANCIAL RESULTS FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2003 CONTINUED RECOVERY IN THIRD FINANCIAL QUARTER

QANTAS GROUP HALF YEAR FINANCIAL RESULTS 22 FEBRUARY 2018 ALAN JOYCE SPEECH

HIGH FUEL PRICES DRIVE HALF YEAR PROFIT DOWN 62% AMIDST CHALLENGING ENVIRONMENT

CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY. Address by Qantas CEO Alan Joyce to National Press Club 9 October 2012

Virgin Australia Holdings FY13 full year results 30 August 2013

AUSTRALIAN AIRPORTS ASSOCIATION AUSTRALIAN AIRPORTS DRIVING TOURISM GROWTH

Qantas Airways Limited. Nomura Conference 30 November Qantas Group. Gareth Evans Chief Financial Officer

Annual Results Air New Zealand

THIRD QUARTER NET PROFIT OF $397 MILLION ON RECORD REVENUE

ANA Reports Record Profits for FY2012

For personal use only

Helloworld Travel Limited results announcement Half year ended 31 December 2017

QUT BlueShift Business Case Competition 2018 Business Case

ANA HOLDINGS Financial Results for FY2014

FIRST QUARTER OPERATING PROFIT IMPROVES TO $274 MILLION

Merrill Lynch 2002 European Transport Leaders Conference. Geoff Dixon Chief Executive Officer Qantas Airways Limited

JET AIRWAYS (I) LTD. Presentation on Financial Results Q4 FY08

OUTLINE OF JAL GROUP MEDIUM RANGE CORPORATE PLAN FOR THE YEARS 2004 THROUGH 2006

Air Berlin PLC AGM 06 June 2013 London

Jet Airways (India) Ltd. Presentation on Financial Results Q3 FY th January 2008

For personal use only

QANTAS ANNUAL REVIEW Broadening our horizons

FY key data Passenger. Cargo. Maintenance. Other. Operating result in m. Revenues in bn -10.4% 78% 11%

Deutsche Bank Australasian Transport Conference

Agenda. Introduction Christine Ourmières-Widener. Financial Review Ian Milne. Performance Update & Outlook Christine Ourmières-Widener

ANA HOLDINGS Announces Mid-Term Corporate Strategy for FY ~Strengthening the foundations of the business and looking into the future~

FIRST QUARTER OPERATING PROFIT RISES TO $281 MILLION

JAL Group Announces its FY Medium-Term Business Plan

PARENT AIRLINE OPERATIONS LIFT GROUP PROFIT

Goldman Sachs Asia-Pacific Airline Conference November 2001

The private financing of airport infrastructure expansions

Narration section of Chairman s Address For 2000 Annual General Meeting

AerCap Holdings N.V. April 11, 2015

Cathay Pacific Airways Interim Results for the six months ended 30 June 2012

MAINFREIGHT LIMITED FULL YEAR RESULT TO MARCH 2015

Airline Performance and Capacity Strategies Dr. Peter Belobaba

ABX. Holdings, Inc. BB&T Transportation Conference. February 2008

For personal use only

28 MARCH 2019 AIR NEW ZEALAND 2019 INTERIM RESULT

SECOND QUARTER OPERATING PROFIT IMPROVES TO $87 MILLION

QANTAS REPORTS STRONG FULL-YEAR PROFIT IN CHALLENGING CONDITIONS

Air Berlin PLC 15 th June, 2016 Annual General Meeting 2016 London

AFTA Travel Trends. April 2018

Speech for the AGM. Air Berlin PLC

Information meeting. Third quarter results. March 2011

American Airlines Group Inc.

ETIHAD AIRWAYS ANNOUNCES ORDER FOR UP TO 117 AIRBUS AIRCRAFT

Chief Executive Officer

Hello everyone, I am Shinichiro Ito, President and CEO of All Nippon Airways.

ETIHAD AIRWAYS CLEARED TO BUY MORE OF VIRGIN AUSTRALIA

Managing through disruption

Transcription:

QANTAS GROUP MARKET UPDATE SYDNEY, 5 December 2013: The Qantas Group today announced a market update, accelerated cost reductions and a capital expenditure and structural review, in response to fundamentally changed market conditions. Market update The Group expects to report an underlying loss before tax in the range of $250 million to $300 million for the six months ending 31 December 2013. Trading conditions saw a marked deterioration in November in particular, with both passenger loads and yields below the already negative trends for the year to date. The Group can also provide the following guidance for the first half of FY14: Group capacity is expected to increase by 1.1 per cent in 1H FY14 compared to 1H FY13. Group Domestic capacity (comprising Qantas Domestic, QantasLink and Jetstar Domestic) is expected to increase by 1.9 per cent in 1H FY14 compared to 1H FY13; Total domestic market capacity is expected to increase by approximately 2.7 per cent, driven by estimated competitor capacity growth of 3.9 per cent; Group yield (excluding the impact of foreign exchange movements) is expected to be approximately 3.5 per cent lower in 1H FY14 compared to 1H FY13, largely due to increased capacity in the domestic and international markets; Group loads are expected to be 1.6 percentage points lower in 1H FY14 compared to 1H FY13; and Underlying fuel costs (excluding the impact of the carbon tax) for 1H FY14 are expected to be approximately $2.27 billion, an increase of $88 million from 1H FY13. The outlook for the second half of FY14 remains volatile and, given the uncertainty in global economic conditions, fuel prices and foreign exchange rates, it is not possible to provide further guidance at this time. Qantas CEO Alan Joyce said the circumstances demanded urgent action. We will do whatever we need to do to secure the Qantas Group s future, Mr Joyce said. The challenges we now face are immense but we will overcome them and we will continue to build a stronger and better Qantas for Australia. Since the Global Financial Crisis, Qantas has confronted a fiercely difficult operating environment including the strong Australian dollar and record jet fuel costs, which have exacerbated Qantas high cost base. The Australian international market is the toughest anywhere in the world. Our competitors in the international market, almost all owned or generously supported by their governments, have increased capacity to pursue Australian dollar profits, changing the shape of the market permanently. Since early 2012, there has also been an unprecedented distortion of the Australian domestic market, with Virgin Australia s strategy to seek majority ownership and massive financial backing from foreign governmentowned airlines (see Appendix 1). This foreign government capital has been used to finance dramatic increases in domestic capacity, with profound implications for the future of Australia s aviation industry. In November, Virgin signalled its intention to continue its strategy, which is designed to weaken Qantas in the domestic market, with a $300 million-plus injection from its foreign owners. Qantas Airways Limited ABN 16 009 661 901 Further information and media releases can be found on the Qantas Newsroom: qantasnewsroom.com.au

The uneven playing field in Australian aviation is being tilted further. We cannot and we will not stand still in these extraordinary circumstances. As we take these urgent actions, we will continue to take the fight to the competition and strengthen our leading position in the domestic market, and we will continue the turnaround of Qantas International. Accelerated cost reduction program The Group will make accelerated cost reductions across all areas of the business, to achieve total cost savings of $2 billion over three years. The existing Qantas Transformation program will be accelerated, with an expanded mandate to achieve these targets, including the following steps: Head count reduction of at least 1,000 positions within 12 months, with an ongoing review CEO and Board pay cut Pay freeze and no FY14 bonus for executives Review of spending with top 100 suppliers Network optimisation and improved fleet utilisation Further overhead reductions Mr Joyce said the Group had already made significant progress in becoming leaner and more efficient. We have reduced the Group s unit costs, excluding fuel, by a total of 19 per cent since FY09, including by 5 per cent in FY13 (see Appendix 2). But these actions are not enough to deal with the current situation. Capital expenditure and structural review Given the deterioration in earnings, the Group no longer expects to generate positive net free cash flow in the current financial year. The Group will conduct a review of all planned capital expenditure to achieve further substantial reductions to ensure that the business generates positive net free cash flow from FY15. This continues the deep cuts to capital expenditure already achieved since 2011. The Group will also launch an immediate review to identify structural changes that could potentially unlock sources of capital and value for shareholders. No options will be excluded from the review. Mr Joyce said the Group would take all steps necessary to respond to the toughest market conditions it had ever faced. We will focus relentlessly on cutting costs and improving productivity, while maintaining our competitive advantages as a business, Mr Joyce said. Australia s best airline for customers Mr Joyce said customers would remain at the heart of the Group s strategy, with a continued focus on service in all areas. We have Australia s best airline and loyalty program, with nearly 10 million loyal frequent flyers, Mr Joyce said. Over the past two years, we have developed a global network based on strategic alliances, including the ground-breaking Emirates partnership and expanding relationships in Asia. The Qantas customer experience is the best it has ever been. After an intensive fleet renewal program, our average passenger aircraft age is now below eight years, the youngest in two decades, and we have

revitalised service with a focus on training and new technology. Customer satisfaction is soaring, with record scores in both the international and domestic markets. Discussions with the Australian Government As we work through our cost reductions, capital expediture and structural review, no options will be off the table, Mr Joyce said. Political leaders recognise Qantas strategic importance, its critical role in providing essential air services, and the benefits to Australia of a strong and viable national carrier. None of the measures being discussed with the government would alleviate the need for us to take the comprehensive actions we have announced today. Government action will, however, be key in enabling us to keep competing effectively on a level playing field. Issued by Qantas Corporate Communication (Q5638) Media queries: M: 0418 210 005 E: qantasmedia@qantas.com.au

Appendix 1 Developments in the Australian Aviation Market The regulation of Australia s aviation industry is like no other in the world. In the international market, in line with most countries, Australia requires that international airlines be Australian majority owned and controlled in order to be eligible for Australian carrier designation. The Australian Government negotiates bilateral access rights and traffic slots around the world on behalf of Australian-designated carriers under the terms of the Air Navigation Act. In the domestic market, however, unlike every comparable jurisdiction in the world, Australia permits domestic airlines to be 100% foreign owned, with one exception, namely Qantas. Every other comparable jurisdiction requires at least majority local ownership and control, and the USA, for example, caps foreign ownership at 25%. In February 2012, Virgin Australia split its corporate structure to enable foreign-government owned airline shareholders Air New Zealand, Etihad and Singapore Airlines, plus the Virgin Group - to buy a majority ownership position in the business, now 73%, and rising potentially to 80% following its capital raising. Apart from its Board, Virgin Australia s international business has no existence independent of the domestic arm: no assets, management, people or funds. In August 2013, the three foreign government-owned airlines provided a loan of $90 million to Virgin. This was subsequently replaced by an equity capital injection of $350 million. The purpose of this sovereign foreign capital is to fund Virgin Australia s strategy in the domestic market and weaken Qantas so that Qantas will be less able to provide support to its international operations. For example, having reported a statutory loss of $98 million in the last financial year, Virgin Australia has added more than 2.5% new capacity to the market, and Tiger has added more than 26% to the domestic market this financial year to date (July 2013 to October 2013) neither of which is the behaviour of a profit-maximising organisation. The foreign airline owners are not driven by the same commercial disciplines as Qantas. Over the longer term they are focused on directing passenger traffic to their home ports for sovereign strategic goals. Virgin Australia is able to fund its activities through its foreign shareholders in a way that Qantas cannot due to the limitations of the Qantas Sale Act. The Act puts restrictions on Qantas ownership and access to foreign capital, which compounds the advantages that foreign government-owned and supported competitors enjoy over Qantas. Unlike many of its competitors, Qantas gets no government subsidies, no tax benefits or concessions, no preferred access to airports and no preferential access to Australian Government business. Qantas has been raising these issues privately with the current and the previous Federal Government since February 2012. It is also contributing to the current public debate which has intensified since the Treasurer s comments on 27 November. Qantas believes that Virgin Australia should not have the benefits conferred by an Australian carrier designation when it has only 20 per cent Australian ownership, and more than two thirds foreign sovereign airline ownership. In addition, Qantas believes the Foreign Investment Review Board should address the fact that the current Virgin Australia share placement process is facilitating a flood of foreign government funds to prolong anticompetitive action aimed at weakening Qantas. Qantas is in discussion with the Government about a range of additional policy measures the Government could consider in order to provide a more level playing field for the aviation sector in Australia.

Appendix 2 Capital Expenditure, Costs and Transformation Milestones Since announcing a wholesale review of costs, capital expenditure and a new strategic direction for Qantas International in August 2011, the Group has made significant progress towards building a strong, viable business for the future. Transformation initiatives across the group have resulted in redundancies of approximately 3000 full-time employees. Milestones over the past two years include: Fleet & Capital Expenditure Deferred delivery of six Airbus A380s to between 2018 and 2021, lining up with the retirement of the last B744ER aircraft in the fleet. Deferred capital expenditure of $US2.3 billion at list prices Deferred delivery of two A380 aircraft to financial year 2017 at earliest Reconfigured 12 x A380 aircraft to increase efficiency, adding 8% more seats by reducing business class and adding more economy and premium economy Reconfigured 9 x B744 aircraft, adding 19% more seats and upgrading interiors to A380 standard Restructured Boeing 787 order, reducing firm commitments for 35 x 787-9 aircraft. Reduction in capex commitments of $US8.5 billion at list prices Reduced B744 fleet from 26 in August 2011 to 16 as of June 30 2013 Youngest average fleet age since privatisation, at 7.9 years as of June 30 2013 Increase in Qantas jet aircraft utilisation FY14 forecast at ~9.9 hours per day compared to FY13 at ~9.4 hours Network Withdrawal from unprofitable international routes including Bangkok and Hong Kong-London, Singapore-Frankfurt, Auckland-Los Angeles, Singapore-Mumbai, Perth-Hong Kong and Adelaide- Singapore Global partnership with Emirates including hub shift for European flying to Dubai from Singapore, integration of Frequent Flyer schemes, joint sales, marketing and flight scheduling Expanded or entered into new alliances with American Airlines, LAN Chile, China Eastern, China Southern, Malaysia Airlines Restructure of Asia flying to focus on right timing and connections, including 40% increase in available seats to Singapore and 14% increase in available seats to Hong Kong Qantas Transformation & Asset Sales Heavy maintenance consolidation from three facilities to one (as of early 2014) Line Maintenance efficiencies; maintenance on demand Catering facility consolidation Airport ground operation efficiencies Corporate and commercial overhead reductions Exit from Freight joint venture with Australia Post with the sale of Star Track Express road freight, and acquisition of 100% of Australian Air Express Sale of Qantas Defence Services