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SIA Group posts record annual profit of S$2.16 billion after three years of losses

SINGAPORE — The Singapore Airlines (SIA) group on Tuesday (May 16) reported a record annual profit of S$2.16 billion, reversing three straight years of losses. 

A Singapore Airlines plane plies along the tarmac of Singapore Changi Airport in Singapore on May 13, 2022.

A Singapore Airlines plane plies along the tarmac of Singapore Changi Airport in Singapore on May 13, 2022.

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SINGAPORE — The Singapore Airlines (SIA) group on Tuesday (May 16) reported a record annual profit of S$2.16 billion, reversing three straight years of losses. 

The company had booked a S$962 million net loss the previous year. 

Strong demand for air travel drove revenue, operating profit and passenger load factor, said SIA. 

At the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the group said it had retained most of its staff and kept a large proportion of its aircraft fleet operational at low utilisation levels.

This allowed its two airlines, SIA and Scoot, to ramp up operations on short notice when air travel surged in FY2022/23, it added. 

"Working collaboratively with key members of Singapore’s aviation ecosystem, both carriers were among the first to launch flights as borders reopened, and captured the pent-up demand as air travel returned," said SIA.

According to SIA Group’s latest operating results, group passenger capacity reached 79 per cent of pre-Covid-19 levels at the end of March. 

SIA and Scoot carried a total of 26.5 million passengers, six times more than the year before. 

The passenger load factor also increased by 55.3 percentage points to 85.4 per cent — the highest in the company's history.

As the demand for air freight declined and as supply chain disruptions brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic subsided, performance in the cargo segment moderated year-on-year. 

"Macroeconomic headwinds dampened consumer demand, while high inventory levels led to a slowdown in new orders," said the group. 

SIA's board recommended a final dividend of 28 cents per share for FY2022/23. Including the interim dividend of 10 cents per share paid on Dec 22, 2022, the total dividend for FY2022/23 will be 38 cents per share. 

OUTLOOK

SIA said it would monitor the demand for air travel and adjust its capacity accordingly, noting that demand remains robust in the first quarter of FY2023/24, underpinned by the recovery in air travel in East Asia.

"Forward sales remain healthy across all cabin classes, led by a strong pick up in bookings to China, Japan, and South Korea."

But it warned that geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties, as well as high-cost inflation, could pose challenges for the airline industry in the months ahead.

At the end of March, the Group had 195 aircraft in its operating fleet comprising 188 passenger aircraft and seven freighters, said SIA. 

It added that its fleet is one of the youngest and most fuel-efficient in the airline industry and operating a young fleet "is the most effective and direct way for an airline to materially lower carbon emissions in the near term". 

RESUMPTION OF FLIGHTS

At the end of March, the group covered 109 destinations in 36 countries and territories. SIA served 74 destinations while its low-cost subsidiary airline Scoot covered 58 destinations. The cargo network covered 118 destinations in 38 countries and territories.

The group will expand its services to China with the resumption of Scoot’s flights to Haikou, Ningbo, Xi’an, Nanning and Shenyang, Jinan and Nanchang.

Sccot will also increase flight frequencies to Athens, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Langkawi, Makassar, Manado, Penang, Perth, Taipei-Hokkaido Tianjin, and Zhengzhou, said the group.

To meet the rising demand during the summer, SIA will also supply supplementary flights to Barcelona, Frankfurt, and Rome and resume services to Busan in August.

It will, however, suspend operations to Gold Coast in July and suspend services to Vancouver in October this year.

The group expects passenger capacity to reach an average of about 83 per cent of pre-Covid-19 levels by the first half of FY2021/22.

Even though fuel prices have moderated in recent months, they continue to remain at elevated levels.

"As competition is expected to increase with more capacity being injected on international routes, the Group will monitor developments closely, and be agile and nimble in its response," said SIA Group. CNA

For more reports like this, visit cna.asia.

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