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Cathay Pacific to burn cash as crew quarantine rules bite

HONG KONG (CNA) – Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific Airways said yesterday that it expected to resume burning cash because of stricter crew quarantine measures after flagging a surprise profit in the second half of 2021 due to cost cuts and a strong cargo market.

The airline forecast it would post an annual loss of HKD5.6 billion to HKD6.1 billion for 2021, well below the average HKD10.2 billion estimate from 12 analysts polled by Refinitiv and its HKD21.65 billion loss in 2020.

The full-year forecast was also narrower than the first-half loss of HKD7.57 billion, with Cathay pointing to positive cashflow generation in the second half.

However, the airline forecast it would burn through HKD1 billion to HKD1.5 billion of cash a month starting in February after the government tightened crew quarantine restrictions, forcing the airline to cut cargo and passenger capacity sharply.

Cathay is operating about two per cent of its pre-pandemic passenger capacity and about 20 per cent of its pre-pandemic cargo capacity in January.

A Cathay Pacific plane on the tarmac in Thailand

Rival Singapore Airlines, which also lacks a domestic market but has less-strict travel rules, forecasts it will reach 47 per cent and 45 per cent of pre-COVID passenger capacity in January and February respectively.

The schedules listed on Cathay’s website for February and March appear about as light as January, with only a handful of flights per month to destinations such as London, Sydney and Tokyo that had multiple daily flights before the pandemic. Flights to mainland China are less affected.

“Until conditions improve, we are doing everything in our power to maximise capacity, and estimate that mitigation measures to increase crew resources will enable us to operate approximately an additional five per cent more cargo flight capacity than we are currently operating,” Cathay Chief Executive Augustus Tang said in a statement.

Hong Kong, which has been pursuing a “zero-COVID” strategy in hopes of opening its border with mainland China, has suspended transit flights from most of the world.

The financial centre last month introduced tighter crew quarantine rules after two Cathay crew members who broke self-isolation measures sparked a COVID-19 outbreak in the city.

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