Qantas has unveiled details of its $2 billion
cost reduction program and capital expenditure review.
The airline
has said it will take action to permanently reduce costs in all
parts of the Qantas Group through to FY17, including fleet and
network changes, productivity improvements, consolidation of
business activities, new technology and procurement savings.
More
than 50 aircraft will be deferred or sold and the group’s
workforce will be reduced by 5,000 full-time equivalent positions
by FY17.
The Qantas Group’s planned capital expenditure
net of operating lease liability will be reduced to $800
million in both FY15 and FY16, a total reduction of $1 billion.
Qantas has also reached agreement on the return of its Brisbane
Airport terminal lease, together with related assets, to the
airport owner at a cash value of $112 million.
Chief
Executive Officer Alan Joyce said Qantas would do everything in
its control to overcome some of the toughest market conditions it
had ever faced.
“It’s
clear that the market Qantas operates in has changed, with
structural economic shifts exacerbated by an uneven playing field
in Australian aviation policy,” Mr Joyce said.
“This
situation is reflected in the financial result Qantas announces
today, an Underlying PBT1 loss of $252 million for the half-year.
This is an unacceptable and unsustainable result. Comprehensive
action is needed in response.
“Qantas’ competitors have
increased capacity to Australia by 46% since 2009, more
than double the world average, at a time of record fuel costs and
economic volatility.
“We have met these challenges head on.
Over the past four years, we have been carrying out the biggest
transformation since Qantas was privatised – cutting comparable
unit costs by 19% over four years, introducing new
aircraft and technology on a large scale, modernising work
practices and revitalising service. But this is not enough for the circumstances we now face.
“The Australian domestic market
has been distorted by current Australian aviation policy, which
allows Virgin Australia to be majority-owned by three foreign
government-backed airlines – yet retain access to Australian
bilateral flying rights.
“Late last year, these three
foreign-airline shareholders invested more than $300 million in
Virgin Australia at a time when, as Virgin Australia reported to
the ASX on 6 February, it was losing money. That capital injection
has supported continued domestic capacity growth by Virgin
Australia despite its growing losses.
“The Virgin Australia
Group has increased capacity into the domestic market at more than
twice the rate of the Qantas Group since July 2011. As a result of
these combined capacity increases, the total domestic profit pool
has been shrunk from more than $700 million in FY12 to less than
$100 million in 1H14.
“We have been clear with the
Australian Government about the uneven playing field and the
measures we believe could address it. But our focus today is on
the immediate steps that Qantas must take.”
Accelerated Qantas Transformation Program
Fleet and Network
The Qantas
Group will re-assign aircraft to better match demand, defer aircraft orders, dispose of aircraft, increase fleet utilisation
and exit under-performing routes.
• Qantas Domestic will
increase utilisation of narrow-body aircraft, allowing Airbus A330
aircraft in the domestic market to concentrate solely on East-West
services and peak services on the Sydney-Melbourne-Brisbane
triangle.
• A330-200s will be freed up to enter the Qantas
International fleet as replacement aircraft, helping to accelerate
the retirement of older Boeing 747 aircraft.
• All six of
Qantas International’s non-reconfigured B747s will be retired
ahead of schedule, by the second half of FY16. Nine reconfigured
B747s with A380-standard interiors will remain.
• Qantas’
final two B737-400s have been retired this month and all B767s
will be retired by the third quarter of FY15, resulting in cost
and passenger benefits from fleet simplification.
• Qantas
International’s eight remaining A380 orders will be deferred, with
an ongoing review of delivery dates to meet potential future
requirements. Schedule changes will allow maximum use of Qantas’
current 12 A380s.
• The final three of 14 Jetstar B787-8s on
firm order will be deferred.
• Jetstar’s A320 order book has
been restructured.
In total, more than 50 aircraft will
be deferred or sold.
By FY16, the group’s passenger fleet
will have been simplified from elevn aircraft types to seven aircraft
types, with an average age of eight years.
Over the next 12
months, Qantas will exit underperforming routes and make aircraft
changes on certain routes to better match capacity to demand.
• Qantas International will withdraw from the
Perth-Singapore route (first quarter FY15).
• Qantas’
Brisbane-Singapore and Sydney-Singapore services will be operated
by A330s, replacing B747s (first quarter FY15)
• Qantas
services between Melbourne and London will be re-timed in November
2014 to reduce A380 ground time in Heathrow (second quarter FY15).
There are no changes to overall capacity on London flights.
• The Melbourne-London service change frees up an A380 for
additional flying, and Qantas will evaluate opportunities to use
the aircraft on other routes.
Workforce Changes
Over the next three years, Qantas will reduce employee numbers
across the group by the equivalent of 5,000 full-time positions,
through measures including:
• Reduction of management
and non-operational roles by 1,500.
• Operational positions
affected by fleet and network changes.
• Restructure of line
maintenance operations.
• The closure of Avalon maintenance
base.
• Restructure of catering facilities including
the closure of Adelaide catering.
The wage freeze for executives
implemented in December 2013 will continue and will be extended to
all Qantas Group employees. The wage freeze will be:
• Ongoing for executives.
• Immediate for open EBAs.
• Proposed for other EBA-covered staff.
This is in
addition to the reduction of fees paid to the Qantas board and a
reduction in the take home pay of the Qantas CEO by 36%
this financial year.
No pay rises or bonuses will be
contemplated until Qantas is profitable again on a full-year
Underlying PBT basis.
Mr Joyce said these were hard but
necessary decisions to protect as many Qantas jobs as possible and
build a strong business for the future.
“I regret the need
for these wide-ranging job losses, but we will do everything we
can to make the process easier for employees who leave the
business,” Mr Joyce said. “At the end of this
transformation, Qantas will remain an employer of more than 27,000
people, the vast majority based in Australia – and we will be a
better and more competitive company.”
Immediate
Priorities
“We must take actions that are unprecedented in
scope and depth to strengthen the core of the Qantas Group
business.
“To reach $2 billion in cost cuts over three
years, we have to work our assets harder, become more productive,
retire older aircraft, and make sure that our fleet and network
are the right size. We must defer growth and cut back where we can, so that we can invest where we need to.
“We have
already made tough decisions and nobody should doubt that there
are more ahead.
“While the implementation and pace of
delivery must change, the guiding principles of our strategy will
not. Safety remains our first priority and we are committed to
being the airlines of choice for customers in all our markets.
“Our long-term goal remains the transformation of the Qantas
Group for profitable, sustainable growth.
“Over the next
three years, we aim to secure our strong Group domestic position
and maximise Qantas International’s competitiveness.
“Qantas Loyalty will continue to access new markets and revenue
streams, building on its success to date.
“When it comes to
Jetstar in Asia, we need to take the right decisions in accord
with current market circumstances and our balance sheet. In
Singapore, growth has been suspended by the Jetstar Asia Board
until such time as conditions improve.
“The over-arching
focus in Asia continues to be profitably bedding down existing
businesses and partnerships. Jetstar has been a pioneer Australian
brand across Asia and we continue to see major opportunities for
it in the world’s fastest-growing aviation region.”
Commitment to Customers
“Despite the tough decisions we
have to make, we will keep delivering outstanding service for our
customers,” Mr Joyce added.
“Important customer investments
will continue, such as the upgrade of our Airbus A330 fleet and
the opening of new lounges in Hong Kong and Los Angeles, and the
service that Qantas passengers receive will not be compromised.
Thanks to the skill and commitment of our people, we have earned
record customer advocacy, and we plan to keep it there.”
Update on Structural Review
Qantas
has reached agreement on the return of its Brisbane Airport
terminal lease, together with related assets, to Brisbane Airport
Corporation, with a cash value of $112 million to be recognised in
the second half of FY14.
Qantas,
Australia
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