Swiss with lower profit in the first half-year
Published: Wednesday, Jul 31st 2024, 08:10
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Swiss has further increased its turnover in the first half of the year. However, the profit cannot keep up with the record-high result from the previous year.
From January to June 2024, the airline generated 5.5 percent higher sales of 2.7 billion Swiss francs, as announced on Wednesday. However, at 264.2 million francs, operating profit was 22 percent lower than in the same period last year.
Swiss cites two main reasons for this: On the one hand, the market situation has normalized because the capacity bottlenecks from the previous year have now largely dissipated. "People's need to travel is still very high, which makes us very happy. However, some airlines have already reached or even exceeded their pre-corona pandemic capacity," said CFO Dennis Weber in the press release.
This has significantly intensified competition. For airlines, this means that they can no longer charge prices as high as they sometimes did during the recovery phase after the pandemic.
On the other hand, costs have also risen due to higher wages that were negotiated. According to the press release, fees were also higher, as were maintenance services due to high inflation. Swiss has also invested in its "customer experience".
However, the half-year results also show that Swiss was able to improve significantly in the second quarter: In the starting quarter, operating profit was still 60 percent down on the previous year. In the months from April to June, the operating result of 233.4 million Swiss francs was "only" around 10 percent down on the previous year. However, the second quarter was also more travel-intensive, according to reports.
Freight business at pre-crisis level
According to the press release, the freight business has now returned to pre-crisis levels. A strong e-commerce business helped to compensate for the weaker demand in the European and American air freight markets due to the economic situation.
Swiss carried around 8.5 million passengers from January to June, 12.3 percent more than in the same period in 2023. The airline operated more than 69,000 flights, an increase of 13 percent compared to the previous year.
Across the entire route network, Swiss offered 12.4% more seat kilometers in the first half of the year and at the same time increased the number of seat kilometers sold by 10.5%. The average seat load factor on flights was 81.9%, 1.4 percentage points lower than in the previous year.
For 2024 as a whole, Swiss now expects capacity growth measured in available seat kilometers of just under 10% compared to the previous year. Capacity is therefore expected to reach around 95% of the pre-crisis level (2019). In the summer months, available capacity is expected to be almost back to the 2019 level.
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