Pandemic-hit ANA expects record net loss of around ¥530 billion
ANA Holdings is expecting to book a record net loss of around Y530b ($5b) and shed about 30 large jets in the business year through March as the coronavirus pandemic hits air travel demand hard, company sources said Wednesday. The parent of All Nippon Airways, which has withheld an earnings estimate so far this business year, believes it will take some time for demand, particularly for international flights, to recover due to the pandemic, the sources said. ANA will retire half of about the 60 wide-body jets it owns, including those on lease, to cut costs. They are less fuel efficient and require more spending for maintenance compared with smaller aircraft. The company said the number of passengers for its international flights plunged 96% in the five months through August from a year earlier after many countries around the world imposed travel restrictions. Even though the number of domestic flight passengers has been gradually increasing partly thanks to the government's travel subsidy program, the IATA expects that global air traffic will not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024. The aviation company plans to announce next Tuesday its earnings results for the first half of the current business year through September and outlook for the full-year earnings. ANA will also unveil a plan to acquire Y400b in subordinated loans from Japanese banks, allowing ANA to count part of the debt as capital, the sources said. As part of efforts to turn around its business, ANA has been in talks with labor unions to cut annual pay for its employees by around 30%, while considering selling unused assets and suspending operations on unprofitable flight routes. ANA logged a net loss of Y108.82b in the April-June quarter.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2020-10-22/star/pandemic-hit-ana-expects-record-net-loss-of-around-y-530-billion
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Pandemic-hit ANA expects record net loss of around ¥530 billion
ANA Holdings is expecting to book a record net loss of around Y530b ($5b) and shed about 30 large jets in the business year through March as the coronavirus pandemic hits air travel demand hard, company sources said Wednesday. The parent of All Nippon Airways, which has withheld an earnings estimate so far this business year, believes it will take some time for demand, particularly for international flights, to recover due to the pandemic, the sources said. ANA will retire half of about the 60 wide-body jets it owns, including those on lease, to cut costs. They are less fuel efficient and require more spending for maintenance compared with smaller aircraft. The company said the number of passengers for its international flights plunged 96% in the five months through August from a year earlier after many countries around the world imposed travel restrictions. Even though the number of domestic flight passengers has been gradually increasing partly thanks to the government's travel subsidy program, the IATA expects that global air traffic will not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024. The aviation company plans to announce next Tuesday its earnings results for the first half of the current business year through September and outlook for the full-year earnings. ANA will also unveil a plan to acquire Y400b in subordinated loans from Japanese banks, allowing ANA to count part of the debt as capital, the sources said. As part of efforts to turn around its business, ANA has been in talks with labor unions to cut annual pay for its employees by around 30%, while considering selling unused assets and suspending operations on unprofitable flight routes. ANA logged a net loss of Y108.82b in the April-June quarter.<br/>