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Singapore Airlines profits slump masks strong operational performance

Singapore Airlines reported a 69% drop in its third-quarter profit, which was distorted by a gain of a single dollar a year ago and losses at Air India. However, strong passenger demand helped to boost operating revenue.

Singapore Airlines owns a 25,1% stake in Air India. The airline began to account for Air India's earnings after December 2024, when the joint venture Vistara of Singapore Airlines was integrated into Air India.

Singapore Airlines reported a net loss of $398.6m (S$505m) during the period October-December, down from S$1.63bn a year ago. This was boosted by an?S$1.1bn gain from the Air India/Vistara merger.

The carrier's decline in profit masks a strong operational performance. It posted a record quarterly revenue of S$5,51 billion, and a 26% increase in operating profit, to S$792 millions, on the back of strong passenger demand, increased yields, and improved passenger loads.

Higher operating costs have partly offset improvements in operational performance due to the record-breaking?global travel demands that keep older aircraft in service, and drive up fuel and maintenance expenses.

Total expenditures for the airline rose by 2.7%, to S$4.71billion, due primarily to capacity expansion, increased fuel prices, and higher uplift volumes.

Singapore Airlines' growth was driven by its passenger operations. Scoot and Singapore Airlines carried 10.9 million passengers in the third quarter, an increase of 6.3% on a year-on-year basis.

The group's average passenger yields (the price that a passenger pays for a kilometer of flying) rose by 1.9%, to 10.9 Singapore Cents per revenue passenger-kilometre. This reflects an improved pricing power.

The group's cargo division saw a 5.4% decline in revenue to S$581m, as yields dropped 6.2%. The cargo load factor of the group, which is a measure of how crowded cargo holds are, fell to 56.3%, as capacity growth outpaced demand growth.

Tabitha Foo is an equity research analyst with DBS Group Research. She said: "Sustained growth in passenger travel should offset the softness of cargo, and the share price will react positively due to the impressive operating performance beat. We remain vigilant on Air India."

Singapore Airlines said that the demand for air travel will remain "healthy" into the last quarter of FY2025/26 due to seasonal travel. From June, the carrier will expand its network by adding new routes, including Riyadh in Saudi Arabia.

Lorraine Tan, Morningstar's director, said: "We expected competition to increase as capacity in Asia returned to levels prior to the pandemic, but some carriers have been able to maintain higher yields for longer." ($1 = 1.2663 Singapore dollars)

(source: Reuters)