https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/07/04/garuda-books-120m-net-loss-in-q1-as-travel-industry-hit-hard-by-covid-19.html



Garuda books $120m net loss in Q1 as travel industry hit hard by COVID-19

   - Yunindita Prasidya

   The Jakarta Post

Jakarta   /   Sat, July 4, 2020   /   10:32 am

National flag carrier Garuda Indonesia booked a net loss of US$120 million
in the first quarter of this year, in stark contrast to profitability
achieved last year, as the COVID-19 pandemic hit travel-related industries
hard.

The publicly listed airline saw a 30 percent year-on-year slump in revenue
to US$768.12 million in the first quarter from $1.1 billion in the same
period last year. As a consequence, it booked a $120 million loss compared
to $20.48 million profit in the January-March period of 2019.

“This industry is indeed a very tough industry. We are talking about a
single-digit margin. So, when a disruption happens, the implication to our
bottom line, cash-wise, is immediate and drastic,” Garuda Indonesia
president director Irfan Setiaputra said on Wednesday during Inventure’s
Indonesia Brand Forum 2020 webinar.

The company’s biggest revenue-generating operations, which is its scheduled
airline services, booked 29.23 percent less income in the first quarter at
$654.53 million, down from $924.93 million.

The company’s expenses, on the other hand, had not fallen as drastically.
Its total operating expenses, which include costs for flight operations,
maintenance and repairs, dropped by 9.92 percent to $945.71 million from
$1.05 billion.

Irfan explained, that despite a slight improvement in airline traffic in
recent weeks following the easing of travel restrictions, the number of
passengers was still down 90 percent, while 70 percent of its aircraft
remained grounded.

The coronavirus outbreak has devastated the aviation industry. The share of
the world’s gross domestic product (GDP) spent on air transportation is
expected to be halved in 2020 at 0.5 percent of the global GDP or $434
billion, according to an International Air Transport Association (IATA)
report released on June 9.

As the number of airline passengers has plunged, airlines are forced into
reducing flight routes and pursuing other measures to cut costs.

“Passenger revenue contributes more than 80 percent of Garuda Indonesia’s
total revenue. With the decline in traffic, there needs to be a strategy to
reduce the flight variable costs,” the company wrote in a statement
published by Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) on May 29.

According to the statement, written in response to the local bourse’s
request from May 12 for information regarding the impact of the pandemic,
the company continued to reduce flight routes, both domestic and
international.

Operations on international routes to the Middle East and China have been
halted until further notice. Services on other international routes have
been cut to around 60 percent to 80 percent against normal flight
frequency.

In a revised statement the company issued on June 15, Garuda reported it
had laid off 18 employees due to the pandemic, while 825 were furloughed as
of March 31.

Meanwhile, Garuda Pilot Association (APG) chairperson Muzaeni told *The
Jakarta Post *on June 2 that the airline had terminated the contracts of
180 pilots as a result of the cutbacks on flights.

In an annual general shareholders meeting on June 5, Garuda shareholders
agreed to fully utilize its 2019 net profit of US$6.98 million as the
company’s reserved funds. Last year was the first time the company managed
to booked profits after booking losses for two consecutive years — with net
losses of $231.16 million in 2018 and $216.28 million in 2017.

This year, however, analysts predict that COVID-19 will cause the company
to suffer another net loss.

“We firmly believe that the sluggish figures for March 2020 are not the end
but, rather, the beginning,” Mirae Asset Sekuritas Indonesia analysts Lee
Young-jun wrote in a report published on May 18.

“The management is trying to focus on cargo business and chartered flights
while increasing efficiencies and lowering costs. However, none of these
are effective and easy to make up [for] the losses,” he added.

Going into the third quarter of the year, the postponement, or even
cancellations, of haj fights will be the biggest risk factor for the
airline, as these flights contributed about 5 percent to the company’s
revenue in 2019, the analyst’s report says. On June 2, the Indonesian
government officially announced that it had decided to cancel the 2020 haj.

The airline’s stock, traded on the IDX under the ticker code GIAA, has lost
about half of its value since the start of the year and closed at Rp 244
per share on Friday. That compares with the benchmark Jakarta Composite
Index’s 21 percent drop so far this year.

“Financially, 2020 will go down as the worst year in the history of
aviation. On average, every day of this year will add US$230 million to
industry losses,” IATA director general and CEO Alexandre de Juniac said in
a statement published on June 9. The IATA reports that airlines are
expected to lose $84.3 billion this year.


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