Qatar Airways posts 39% jump in annual profit to record $1.67b
Qatar Airways posted a 39% jump in annual net profit to a record 6.1b Qatari riyals ($1.67b) on Tuesday. Revenue grew by 6% to 81b riyals in the year ended March 31, the government-owned airline said. It carried more than 40m passengers and recorded a load factor of 83%. "Our continued focus on profitability, efficiency and customer experience have been underpinned by a strategic programme of network growth and fleet expansion, resulting in the highest revenues and profit margins in the history of the airline", CEO Badr Mohammed Al-Meer was quoted as saying in a statement from the airline. Demand for air travel has rebounded since the pandemic, but airlines have been constrained as planemakers struggle to get back to previous production levels due to disrupted supply chains and a safety crisis at Boeing. In May, Al-Meer said aircraft manufacturers like Airbus and Boeing needed to put more pressure on their suppliers to reduce delivery delays. The airline last month announced it was in talks with the two planemakers regarding a major wide-body order.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-07-03/oneworld/qatar-airways-posts-39-jump-in-annual-profit-to-record-1.67b
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Qatar Airways posts 39% jump in annual profit to record $1.67b
Qatar Airways posted a 39% jump in annual net profit to a record 6.1b Qatari riyals ($1.67b) on Tuesday. Revenue grew by 6% to 81b riyals in the year ended March 31, the government-owned airline said. It carried more than 40m passengers and recorded a load factor of 83%. "Our continued focus on profitability, efficiency and customer experience have been underpinned by a strategic programme of network growth and fleet expansion, resulting in the highest revenues and profit margins in the history of the airline", CEO Badr Mohammed Al-Meer was quoted as saying in a statement from the airline. Demand for air travel has rebounded since the pandemic, but airlines have been constrained as planemakers struggle to get back to previous production levels due to disrupted supply chains and a safety crisis at Boeing. In May, Al-Meer said aircraft manufacturers like Airbus and Boeing needed to put more pressure on their suppliers to reduce delivery delays. The airline last month announced it was in talks with the two planemakers regarding a major wide-body order.<br/>