General Industry

Cathay Pacific Expecting A Large H2 Loss

By Dave Simpson
Cathay Pacific Expecting A Large H2 Loss

Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd has said that it is expecting a "significantly higher" second-half loss than its record first-half loss, driven by low demand, restructuring charges and impairments on its fleet of planes.

The airline reported a HK$9.87 billion ($1.27 billion) loss in the first half of the year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Analysts had on average forecast a full-year loss of HK$18.3 billion before the announcement, according to 13 polled by Refinitiv.

Its previous record annual loss was HK$8.7 billion in 2008, during the global financial crisis.

"We are still not seeing any meaningful improvement in our passenger business," Cathay chief customer and commercial officer Ronald Lam said in a statement.

The airline reported a 98.6% fall in passenger numbers in November, though a smaller 26.2% decline in cargo carriage.

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"Given the slow speed of recovery, we expect to operate about 9% of pre-COVID-19 capacity in December and slightly above 10% in January 2021," Lam said of the passenger business.

Cathay said in October that it would cut 5,900 jobs to help it weather the pandemic, including nearly all of the positions at its regional airline, Cathay Dragon, which it shut down.

As part of the restructuring plan, which is expected to cost HK$2.2 billion, the remaining pilots and flight attendants signed new contracts that resulted in permanent pay cuts.

The airline expects to operate less than 50% of its normal passenger capacity in 2021 due to border closures. In the first half, it plans to operate well below 25%, but it forecasts a possible recovery in the second half as COVID-19 vaccines are rolled out more widely.

June Rescue Package

To help bolster its balance sheet in the meantime, Cathay received a $5 billion rescue package led by the Hong Kong government in June.

News by Reuters, edited by Hospitality Ireland. Click subscribe to sign up for the Hospitality Ireland print edition.