Finland's national carrier Finnair (FIA1S.HE) posted a deeper-than-expected quarterly loss on Tuesday, and said the Ukraine war and lingering impact of the pandemic would keep the company in the red for a third straight year in 2022. The company said in the second quarter to end June it operated at just 64% of 2019 capacity as Russian airspace closures restricted flights to key Asian markets such as Japan and South Korea. While Finnair said demand has almost normalized in Europe and the United States, it plans to unveil a new strategy in the autumn to address the uncertain outlook that includes high fuel prices, the pandemic and the Ukraine war. "Finnair estimates that the difficult operating environment, inclusive of the closed Russian airspace, will prevail for a longer period," it said. "Therefore, the company is preparing a new strategy to improve its weak profitability and to strengthen its financial position."<br/>
oneworld
Japan Airlines plans to transfer about 3,000 workers from its core business to its budget carriers and nonaviation units, Nikkei has learned, as forecasts show business travel struggling to return to pre-pandemic levels. The move will see JAL pivot more toward tourism demand, which is expected to recover faster. This marks JAL's first workforce reshuffle centering on noncore businesses. Of the 3,000 or so workers to be reassigned, about 60% will go to nonaviation units such as Jalux, which handles airport shopping, e-commerce and insurance. The remainder will be transferred to budget carrier businesses, including Zipair Tokyo, which started service in 2020. JAL had about 35,400 employees groupwide as of fiscal 2021. Almost 90% of this total -- roughly 31,300 -- worked in the airline segment, which does not include its low-cost carrier operations. JAL anticipates that the budget carrier and nonaviation segments will have about 3,000 new workers by fiscal 2025, with these positions to be filled through reassignment along with new recruits. Global air passengers are projected to grow about 70% to 3.8b in 2022, recovering to roughly 80% of pre-pandemic levels, according to the IATA. JAL sees its domestic service recovering to about 90% of pre-pandemic levels in fiscal 2022, but international service is expected to reach slightly less than 50% owing to a slump in cash-cow business travel bookings. Budget carriers are forecast to recover more quickly since they cater mainly to tourists. Before the pandemic, the JAL brand airline businesses earned about 70% of the group's earnings before interest and taxes. The carrier aims to lower this to 55% by fiscal 2025.<br/>