Jet Airways India’s troubles deepen after third straight loss
Economy

Jet Airways India’s troubles deepen after third straight loss

The net loss in the three months through September was 13 billion rupees, compared with a profit of 496.3 million rupees a year ago

   
A Jet Airways India Ltd. plane prepares to land at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai | Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

A Jet Airways India Ltd. plane prepares to land at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai | Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

The net loss in the three months through September was 13 billion rupees, compared with a profit of 496.3 million rupees a year ago

Mumbai: Jet Airways India Ltd. posted its third consecutive quarterly loss, as intense competition kept fares low amid rising oil prices.

The net loss in the three months through September was 13 billion rupees ($180 million), compared with a profit of 496.3 million rupees a year ago, the nation’s biggest full-service carrier said in a Monday statement.

Key insights

The loss at the full-service carrier is the latest sign that Indian airlines are struggling to survive in a market where competition has depressed fares and high fuel prices negate gains from a surge in demand for air travel. Local airlines would need to raise ticket prices by 12 percent to counter the blow from fuel costs and a weakening rupee, yet that would lead to a slump in passenger numbers, according to CRISIL, the Indian unit of S&P. The Mumbai-based carrier isn’t the only one in trouble. IndiGo, the low-cost operator, reported a quarterly loss for the first time as a publicly traded company for the three months through September. SpiceJet Ltd., a budget carrier, has said it’s seeking more time to pay for leased aircraft.

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Jet Airways’s fuel costs rose 58 percent to 24.2 billion rupees. The carrier, which hasn’t made a profit in nine of the past 11 fiscal years, has been seeking to raise funds to ease a crunch. Last month, it said it received notices from aircraft leasing companies about late payments or contract defaults. Jet Airways shares have slumped 71 percent this year, shrinking its market value to $377.5 million. Besides pledging to cut costs, the board in August proposed to pare debt and sell the carrier’s stake in JetPrivilege, a loyalty program. Abu Dhabi’s Etihad owns 24 percent of Jet Airways Two-Cent Fares Are Killing Airlines in India’s Cutthroat Market. – Bloomberg