Business

HK carrier Cathay Pacific posts US$972 mil first-half loss

Figure an improvement on US$1.3 bil loss last year

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 11 Aug 2021 8:00PM

HK carrier Cathay Pacific posts US$972 mil first-half loss
With no domestic market to fall back on, Cathay Pacific has been among the worst hit of the major global airlines. – Pixabay pic, August 11, 2021

HONG KONG – Struggling Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific today reported a US$972 million (RM4.1 billion) net loss in the first six months of this year as the pandemic continues to hammer demand for travel.

And, while the figure is an improvement on the US$1.3 billion loss suffered in the same period last year, the airline said the outlook remained uncertain owing to ongoing struggles to battle the disease.

Chairman Patrick Healy said 2021 continues to be the ”toughest period” in the airline’s 70-year history, but the progress of global vaccination drives provided some encouragement for the industry.

“Covid-19 will continue to have a severe impact on our business until borders progressively open and travel constraints are lifted,” he warned.

With no domestic market to fall back on, Cathay Pacific has been among the worst hit of the major global airlines.

In the midst of the pandemic last year, Hong Kong’s government came to the rescue with a major bailout.

Hong Kong has kept coronavirus cases low by effectively sealing itself off to most of the world for the past 18 months, a move that has kept people safe but crippled the travel industry.

Earlier this month, authorities lifted some of those restrictions, meaning visitors without work visas or residency would now be able to travel to the city. But they will still have to undergo between 7-21 days of hotel quarantine depending on where they have come from. 

Cathay Pacific carried just 157,000 passengers in the first half of the year, 96% fewer than in the same period last year. The company made just US$96 million from passenger flights during that period.

Instead, it is air cargo keeping the airline on life support, generating four fifths of revenue. 

Healy said the firm hoped to be operating at around 30% of its pre-pandemic passenger capacity by the fourth quarter of this year.

But much will depend on “operational and passenger travel restrictions being lifted”.

“As governments have stated, this is only going to be possible when sufficiently high vaccination levels are achieved. The progress of vaccination is encouraging, but the pace and timing of recovery remain uncertain,” Healy added.

Cathay suffered a record US$2.8 billion loss last year. It has slashed its workforce through redundancies, early retirements and shutting down overseas pilot crew bases in five countries.

Bloomberg Intelligence analyst James Teo said Cathay’s outlook for the second half of the year looked more positive.

“It’s not just the reopening, but also since their Europe flights are seeing 40% load factor in June and China flights are also not bad at 29%. This could improve with the reopening,” he said, referring to Hong Kong gradually relaxing its entry rules.

Shares in Cathay rose 1.61% in afternoon trade, following the release of the earnings report. – AFP, August 11, 2021

Related News

Events / 1w

Arrivia, KrisFlyer deepen partnership with launch of cruise redemptions

Malaysia / 3w

Gawai, Kaamatan flight tickets fixed at RM499, government to bear subsidy – Anthony Loke

Opinion / 3w

Improvement in making Hari Raya Haji travel more bearable

Trending / 1mth

Xiaohongshu and Singapore Tourism Board ink MoU to tap changing outbound travel habits

Opinion / 1mth

The Islamic business revolution in Southern Thailand

Business / 2mth

No job cuts or unpaid leave despite industry pressures - AirAsia X

Spotlight

Malaysia

Malaysia must accelerate energy transition to safeguard future

By The Vibes Says

Opinion

World suffers from shortage of trust, Modi tells G7 leaders

Malaysia

Mother, son perish in Johor crash with trailer

Malaysia

Head-on crash with durian lorry kills two on Pahang highway

Malaysia

MACC smashes RM2.5 million procurement cartel in sweeping multi state raids

Malaysia

Malaysian tourists spark backlash in China over alleged rude behaviour (video)

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Diary

Penang: Strict enforcement to ensure food hygiene, focus on deliveries

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Four men arrested in Sabah following gang rape of teenager in her bedroom

You may be interested

Business

KPJ posts strong FY2025 performance, sets sights on next growth phase

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Business

Oil prices slide as US-Iran peace deal raising hopes of supply recovery

Business

US dollar surges to three-month high as Fed signals possible rate hike

Business

US dollar weakens as markets await Warsh's first Fed decision

Business

Brent crude plummets below US$80 as US-Iran peace deal hopes eclipse Wall Street AI slump