Qantas Airways posts $2.6 billion loss for year reflecting fleet write downs and competition
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}FILE - In this Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013 file photo, a Qantas plane prepares to land at Sydney Airport, at Sydney, Australia. Qantas Airways Ltd. ,on Thursday Aug. 21, 2014, posted a record 2.8 billion Australian dollar ($2.6 billion) statutory loss for the last fiscal year reflecting a profit-draining battle with its smaller rival Virgin Australia and aircraft write downs. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft, File) (The Associated Press)
Qantas Airways Ltd. on Thursday posted a record 2.8 billion Australian dollar ($2.6 billion) loss, reflecting a profit-draining battle with its smaller rival Virgin Australia and aircraft write downs.
The loss for the financial year ended June 30 is the largest the former state-owned airline has posted in its 94-year history. It made an AU$1 million profit in the previous year.
The dire result was expected. Shares of Qantas were up 7 percent in Sydney on the airline's confirmation it would separate its domestic and troubled international businesses. It will establish a company for the international business that will be able to attract new investors after an Australian law change eased limits on foreign investment in Qantas
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}The result included an AU$2.6 billion write down of the value of its aging international fleet of Boeing 747s and Airbus A380s, reflecting a weakened Australian dollar.
Excluding the write down and other one-off costs, Qantas made an underlying pre-tax loss of AU$646 million, compared to a AU$186 million underlying profit a year earlier.
Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce described the result as "confronting," but said the massive loss represented history.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}"We have now come through the worst," he said in a statement.
"With our accelerated Qantas transformation program, we are already emerging as a leaner, more focused and more sustainable Qantas group," he said.
Joyce said the underlying loss for the latest year reflected higher fuel costs and growth in its passenger capacity outstripping demand.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Joyce forecast a profit in the first half of the current fiscal year.
The airline announced in February it would cut its employees by 5,000. So far it has shed 2,500 workers.