Australia's Qantas lifts domestic revenue estimates, shares hit record high
Australian flag carrier Qantas Airways on Friday raised its first-half domestic revenue expectations and said it was on track to restart dividend payments from the second half of the financial year, sending shares to a record high. Under the leadership of a new CEO and chair, the iconic Australian brand has been working to rebuild a reputation that was battered over the last 18 months amid legal, regulatory and customer issues. The airline said domestic demand for travel was stronger than expected and also lowered first-half jet fuel costs after a drop in global prices to about A$2.55b ($1.69b), from an earlier estimate of A$2.7b. The firm's shares gained as much as 1.6% on Friday to A$8.04, hitting a record high for the second time in the week. Qantas now expects revenue per available seat kilometre for its domestic businesses to increase by 3% to 5% for the first half ended Dec. 31 compared to a year ago, up from the 2% to 4% range it provided in August. Its international revenue per available seat kilometre was still expected to fall by 7% to 10%, as rivals restore capacity and airfares retreat from post-pandemic highs. Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said in a speech at the airline's annual general meeting on Friday that the group was performing in line with expectations in the first half. "Jetstar saw stronger than anticipated demand, while Qantas Domestic load factors and demand for corporate travel continues to improve year on year," she said.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-10-25/oneworld/australias-qantas-lifts-domestic-revenue-estimates-shares-hit-record-high
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Australia's Qantas lifts domestic revenue estimates, shares hit record high
Australian flag carrier Qantas Airways on Friday raised its first-half domestic revenue expectations and said it was on track to restart dividend payments from the second half of the financial year, sending shares to a record high. Under the leadership of a new CEO and chair, the iconic Australian brand has been working to rebuild a reputation that was battered over the last 18 months amid legal, regulatory and customer issues. The airline said domestic demand for travel was stronger than expected and also lowered first-half jet fuel costs after a drop in global prices to about A$2.55b ($1.69b), from an earlier estimate of A$2.7b. The firm's shares gained as much as 1.6% on Friday to A$8.04, hitting a record high for the second time in the week. Qantas now expects revenue per available seat kilometre for its domestic businesses to increase by 3% to 5% for the first half ended Dec. 31 compared to a year ago, up from the 2% to 4% range it provided in August. Its international revenue per available seat kilometre was still expected to fall by 7% to 10%, as rivals restore capacity and airfares retreat from post-pandemic highs. Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said in a speech at the airline's annual general meeting on Friday that the group was performing in line with expectations in the first half. "Jetstar saw stronger than anticipated demand, while Qantas Domestic load factors and demand for corporate travel continues to improve year on year," she said.<br/>