Saturday, December 21, 2024
36.3 C
Lagos

Airlines May Burn $61bn Cash Reserves in 2nd Qtr over COVID-19

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) published new analysis showing that airlines may burn through $61 billion of their cash reserves during the second quarter ending 30 June 2020, while posting a quarterly net loss of $39 billion.
This analysis is based on the impact assessment IATA released last week, under a scenario in which severe travel restrictions last for three months. In this scenario, full-year demand falls by 38% and full-year passenger revenues drop by $252 billion compared to 2019. The fall in demand would be the deepest in the second quarter, with a 71% drop.
The impact will be severe, driven by the following factors:
Revenues are expected to fall by 68%. This is less than the expected 71% fall in demand due to the continuation of cargo operations, albeit at reduced levels of activity

Variable costs are expected to drop sharply—by some 70% in the second quarter—largely in line with the reduction of an expected 65% cut in second quarter capacity. The price of jet fuel has also fallen sharply, although we estimate that fuel hedging will limit the benefit to a 31% decline.

Fixed and semi-fixed costs amount to nearly half an airline’s cost.  We expect semi-fixed costs (including crew costs) to be reduced by a third. Airlines are cutting what they can, while trying to preserve their workforce and businesses for the future recovery.

These changes to revenues and costs result in an estimated net loss of $39 billion in the second quarter.
On top of unavoidable costs, airlines are faced with refunding sold but unused tickets as a result of massive cancellations resulting from government-imposed restrictions on travel. The second quarter liability for these is a colossal $35 billion.  Cash burn will be severe. We estimate airlines could be burning through $61 billion of their cash balances in the second quarter.
“Airlines cannot cut costs fast enough to stay ahead of the impact of this crisis. We are looking at a devastating net loss of $39 billion in the second quarter. The impact of that on cash burn will be amplified by a $35 billion liability for potential ticket refunds. Without relief, the industry’s cash position could deteriorate by $61 billion in the second quarter,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
Several governments are responding positively to the industry’s need for relief measures. Among countries providing specific financial or regulatory aid packages to the industry are Colombia, the United States, Singapore, Australia, China, New Zealand and Norway. Most recently, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, and the Netherlands have relaxed regulations to allow airlines to offer passengers travel vouchers in place of refunds.
“Travel and tourism is essentially shut down in an extraordinary and unprecedented situation. Airlines need working capital to sustain their businesses through the extreme volatility. Canada, Colombia, and the Netherlands are giving a major boost to the sector’s stability by enabling airlines to offer vouchers in place of cash refunds. This is a vital time buffer so that the sector can continue to function. In turn, that will help preserve the sector’s ability to deliver the cargo shipments that are vital today and the long-term connectivity that travelers and economies will depend on in the recovery phase,” said de Juniac.

 

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

PenCom Targets N22tn Pension Contributions by End 2024

The National Pension Commission (PenCom) says it expects pension...

PalmPay, Jumia Launch Holiday Campaign to Reward Users

This holiday season just got a whole lot more...

Adekunle Gold, Wande Coal, Young Jonn Set to Thrill Fans at Lagos Shopping Festival

Lagosians are in for the most exciting music extravaganza...

Mediacraft Associates Continues to Blaze the Trail in Awards

  Group CEO Voted ‘Legend of Marketing Comms’ John Ehiguese, CEO...

Committee of Banks in Nigeria Donates Multimillion Naira Relief Materials to Jigawa Flood Victims

The Committee of Banks in Nigeria on Thursday lifted...

Topics

CIIN Tasks Insurance Professionals on Industry Revolution, Business Landscape

Sir Muftau Oyegunle, President, Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria...

133m Nigerians Lack Access to Financial Inclusion, Risk Poverty—Adeduro 

Mr. Mayowa Adeduro Managing Director/CEO Tangerine General Insurance Limited Mr. Mayowa Adeduro,...

Global Airlines Financial Monitor: October 2017

The initial financial data for Q3 point to...

Skye Bank to Polaris Bank: Another Fake Promise?

When the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) sacked the...

Zenith Bank FY: 2017 Earnings: Resilient Performance… A Clear Case of Undervaluation

Mr. Peter Amangbo, Group MD/CEO, Zenith Bank Plc Zenith Bank...

Business Journal Insurance Summit for Nov. 17

Alhaji Mohammed Kari, Commissioner for Insurance, National Insurance Commission...

GENCOs, TCN, DISCOs on War Path over Power Losses

Following the continuous worsening power outages the privatised Generating Power Companies (GENCOs), the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) and the Distribution Power Companies (DISCOs) are now on each other’s neck over who bears the cost of power losses from evacuation points through the national grid to the distribution network. This is due to dilapidated facilities at both the transmission level and distribution network.

ATCON Lists Challenges to Telecom Growth in Nigeria

The Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) has...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img