Cathay Pacific net profit tripled in 2013

17 Mar, 2014

Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific said on March 12 net profit more than tripled last year on a rise in Chinese travellers and fuel-cost savings, but its cargo unit saw earnings fall while analysts warned of a tough future. The city's flag-carrier said profit jumped to HK$2.62 billion ($338 million) from HK$862 million in 2012 as revenue climbed 1.1 percent to HK$100.5 billion. The 204 percent increase helped the firm recover from a painful 2012, when its bottom line was hammered by the effects of the eurozone crisis as well as persistently high fuel prices.
The result was in line with the average HK$2.74 billion net profit forecast by analysts in a poll by the Wall Street Journal.
However, the figure is still well down from the HK$5.5 billion profit seen in 2011.
"The operating environment remained challenging throughout 2013... It was therefore encouraging to see an improvement in our overall performance," company chairman Christopher Pratt said in a filing to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
"Business outlook for 2014 looks to be improved when compared to 2013," he added.
Cathay, which also owns Hong Kong-based airline DragonAir, said it transported almost 30 million passengers in 2013, up 3.3 percent on-year, helped by strong demand for travel from mainland China as well as promotional ticket programmes.
While fuel prices were the most significant cost - at 39.0 percent of total costs in 2013 - the firm said it had addressed the problem partly by withdrawing older planes and using more fuel-efficient aircraft. It also said reshuffling schedules helped bring down fuel costs by 4.6 percent year-on-year.

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