Lufthansa yesterday became the latest airline to report an annual profit and strong demand for travel despite weaknesses in the global economy. The airline said it expected «a significant improvement» in profitability this year as «demand for air travel remains high». The results came as Australian airline Qantas said it expected to hire 8,500 people over the next decade to rebuild its workforce, having cut staffing significantly at the height of the pandemic. Air France-KLM and British Airways owner IAG have also reported a return to profit in recent weeks and predicted the recovery will continue.
In Europe, many low-cost airlines plan to fly more passengers this summer than in 2019. Ryanair, the region's largest airline, has forecast a higher profit for its financial year ending in March than in 2019. « I would be optimistic the industry can get back to 2019 profitability levels,» said Stephen Furlong, a European airlines analyst at Davy. The recovery in the US was faster than in Europe, with some airlines returning to profit in 2021 thanks to a sizeable domestic market, few travel restrictions and generous subsidies from the US government.
Airlines have yet to fully rebuild their pre-pandemic flight schedules, with the industry facing constraints including shortages of new planes and staff. In the longer run, analysts said a total return to pre-pandemic profitability relied on increasing capacity. His airline is «back» as bookings soar. However, he means his airline should start earning more from shuttling people rather than cargo fares.
That is the key to Lufthansa's shares staying aloft. Shareholders loved Lufthansa's profit recovery last year. That strong run partly stems from a successful diversification of group earnings. That said, Lufthansa would like to sell a stake in the latter to lower its net debt to an Ebitda ratio below the current 2.3 times.
Longhaul flights will have to make up the difference for Lufthansa, led by the lower-fare leisure traveller. Even Lufthansa admits that more profitable corporate bookings should still be 15 per cent below pre-pandemic levels in 2024. Lufthansa will double its shorthaul cargo fleet just as profitability normalises from very high levels. Lower fuel costs, too, boost earnings.
I think most airlines can get back to 2019 profitability levels within 1-2 years. Demand is ever-growing as more and more people want to travel around the world and momentarily that is possible (no Covid restrictions in most places).
ReplyDeleteSome companies like Ryanair will go above the 2019 profitability levels. I'm sure of it. It's just going to take 12-16 months to get there.
DeleteIt will be good to see more and more people hired in the industry. A lot have been laid off during the pandemic and this is good news. It was a very hard time for everyone involved in this industry.
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