The Qantas full year to 30 June financial briefing was held this morning.
The Qantas group filings and presentations are available on www.asx.com.au under the code QAN.
The highlights are:
- Profit before tax down 87% compared to the previous financial year to $181 million.
- Profit after tax is $123 million. The corresponding figures in financial year 2008 were a PBT of $1.4 billion and a net profit of $970 million.
- The PBT for 2009 is less than the half year to 31 December PBT of $288 million, indicating a second half overall loss.
- Those who rely on QAN dividends and received a total of 35 cents a share last year will only get the 6 cents paid for the 2009 half as there is no final dividend
- The group will lease 4 more Airbus A330s to make up for delays to the 787 program on which it remains ‘committed’ but ‘vigilant.’
- The additional A330s will allow Jetstar to pursue its international expansion.
- Record earnings were made by the Frequent Flyer program of $310 million EBIT, or an underlying $226 million under complex accounting procedures outlined in a supplementary ASX filing.
- Qantas brands lost $77 million for the full year after non-recurring items and had an underlying profit of $4 million.
- Jetstar made a record $137 million EBIT, a rise of 18%
- As reported by Plane Talking two months ago, Jetstar will reduce Avalon-Sydney services to 4 daily and begin direct Melbourne-Sydney flights in October to deal with Tiger at 5 flights a day, an overall increase of Jetstar capacity on the prime Qantas Cityflyer route.
- Qantas will reconfigure its A380s and Boeing 744s for more premium economy seats and less business class seating, details to be announced later.
- Multiple strategies will be rolled out to target the SME market (where Virgin Blue is strong).
- There is no profit guidance.
- However demand is now matching capacity following the parking of aircraft and reduced flying hours, and yields appear to have stabilised but not yet started to rise.
- Alan Joyce says he believes the first flight of the Boeing 787 will take place this year and that first deliveries of the 787-9 will be made as promised by Boeing in mid-2013.
- A detailed report will be available to Crikey email subscribers this afternoon, and followed up on Plane Talking.
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.