War and oil threaten to overshadow BA owner's pandemic recovery
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[February 25, 2022] By
Kate Holton and James Davey
LONDON (Reuters) -British Airways-owner IAG
cancelled flights to Moscow and pledged to avoid Russian airspace on
Friday as the invasion of Ukraine and surging oil prices threatened its
post-pandemic return to profitability.
With passenger numbers edging nearer to 2019 levels, the group which
also owns Aer Lingus, Iberia and Vueling vowed to bring an end to two
straight years of multibillion-dollar losses with a return to
profitability from the second quarter.
But as it published results it said the British flag carrier had
suspended flights to Moscow and would not use Russian airspace, a move
that can add significant costs as diverted planes fly south to avoid
areas of tension in the Middle East.
Russia banned British airlines from using its airspace on Friday, a day
after London banned Russian flag carrier Aeroflot. Other airlines are
avoiding Russia, including Virgin Atlantic, on routes between Europe and
Asia.
With oil prices back above $100 a barrel, IAG Chief Executive Luis
Gallego said the company was hedged against volatile crude prices for
two years, with the first year around 60% hedged. He said the conflict
in Ukraine could knock general customer confidence, particularly for
Americans.
"The point of sale in the U.S. can be affected because the people can be
concerned that there is a war in Europe," he said, adding the company
had not seen any impact on bookings.
SIGNS OF RECOVERY
The renewed gloom around an industry that has battled two years of
travel restrictions that left planes grounded around the world
threatened to overshadow the signs of recovery at one of the biggest
airline groups.
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A British Airways aircraft takes off from Heathrow Airport in west
London, Britain, February 23, 2018. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
IAG said on Friday it expected passenger capacity to reach 85% of pre-pandemic
levels this year, following a collapse to just 36% in 2021. And while the
Omicron coronavirus variant affected bookings in January and February, it had
only had a minimal impact on bookings for Easter and summer 2022.
The group reported a 2.97 billion euro ($3.33 billion) net loss in 2021, versus
a 4.39 billion euro loss in 2020.
"We are confident that a strong recovery is underway," Gallego said, adding
business travel had started to pick up, especially on transatlantic routes.
The group's forecast for a return to profitability assumes no further setbacks
related to COVID-19 and travel restrictions or material impact from "recent
geopolitical developments."
Shares in IAG are down 19% over the last year. They fell 6% on Thursday after
Russia's full invasion of Ukraine forced oil prices to jump back to 2014 levels
on fears of supply disruption. They opened up on Friday before sliding back 1%.
IAG, which operates 533 aircraft, has been slower than some of its peers to
recover from the pandemic, due to its exposure to the slow-to-open UK market,
the long-shut UK-U.S. route and smaller cargo unit.
Passenger capacity in the fourth quarter was 58% of 2019 levels, up from 43% in
the third.
($1 = 0.8931 euros)
(Reporting by James Davey Editing by Alistair Smout and Mark Potter)
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