Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Qantas slashes jobs, flights amid rising fuel costs

Australia's national carrier, says it is decreasing staffs and flights in response to high oil and jet fuel prices and the impact of significant natural disasters in Japan, New Zealand and Australia.

Qantas Chief Executive Officer, Mr Alan Joyce, said the measures included reductions in domestic and international capacity, retirement of aircraft, reduction of management positions and ongoing fuel surcharges.

"The significant and sustained increases in the price of fuel is the most serious challenge Qantas has faced since the Global Financial Crisis," Mr Joyce said.

"The price of Singapore Jet Fuel has risen from around US$88 per barrel in September 2010, to more than US$131 per barrel today. Qantas fuel costs for the second half of FY11 will be $2.0 billion.

"There has never been a time when the world faced so many natural disasters, all of which have come at a significant financial cost to the Qantas Group.



"We need to act decisively to respond to rising fuel costs and natural disasters, just like we did during the Global Financial Crisis, to ensure the ongoing sustainability of our business."

The Qantas Group's result for second half of FY11 will be impacted by a number of significant events, including:
- A380 Rolls-Royce engine incident and fleet grounding - $25 million in second half of FY11 in addition to $55 million in the first half of FY11; and
- A number of significant natural disasters which are currently estimated to total approximately $140 million.
- Queensland floods - $60 million
- Cyclones (Yasi and Carlos) - $20 million
- Christchurch earthquake - $15 million
- Japan earthquake and tsunami - $45 million

Mr Joyce said it was too early to estimate the likely impact of these significant events on the Qantas Group's result for FY12.

Qantas management has reviewed operations and are implementing a number of measures which will reduce costs and increase revenue in order to protect the interests of employees and shareholders including:

- Reduction of Qantas Group domestic capacity growth in 2H11 from 14 per cent to 8 per cent and the reduction of Qantas Group international capacity growth in 2H11 from 10 per cent to 7 per cent;
- Suspension of up to four return weekly Jetstar services from Australia to Japan (from 1 April to end of August); the suspension of Qantas services between Perth and Narita (from 8 May); and downsizing of Qantas aircraft between Sydney and Narita from a Boeing 747 to an Airbus 330;
- Reduction of three daily Jetstar domestic New Zealand services to Christchurch and one Melbourne to Christchurch daily service (all from April);
- Fleet changes with the early retirement of two B767 aircraft; and
- Review of manpower costs which will include initiatives to reduce management headcount and annual and long service leave balances.

"We want to limit redundancies wherever possible and will be using a range of initiatives to manage the reduction in capacity including annual and long service leave. At this stage only management positions will be made redundant," Mr Joyce said.
In addition, Qantas has already increased domestic airfares and international fuel surcharges in February and March this year in response to rising fuelprices . Jetstar also increased fares in selected domestic and international markets in February and increased ancillary revenue, including baggage charges.

In spite of the increase in fuel surcharges and fare increases, Qantas will not recover the full impact of current and forecast fuelprices.

Mr Joyce said the diversity of the Qantas Group would assist the business to manage this volatility in the market, by providing greater flexibility than many of the Group's competitors.

"Our portfolio of businesses - Qantas Airlines, Jetstar, QantasLink, Qantas Frequent Flyer and Qantas Freight- allows us to succeed no matter what challenges we face - from economic cycles to fuel price rises and natural disasters," he said.

Source http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/128443/20110330/qantas-slashes-jobs-flights-amid-rising-fuel-costs.htm

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Australia’s Home-Loan Approvals, Consumer Confidence Decline

Australian home-loan approvals fell in January by the most in a year as floods inundated the nation’s east coast and consumer confidence slid on expectations a government-proposed carbon tax will lower household income.

The number of loans granted to build or buy houses and apartments dropped 4.5 percent from December, the first fall in seven months, with Queensland state approvals plunging 16.4 percent, the statistics bureau said in Sydney. The sentiment index fell 2.4 percent to 104.1 in March from a month ago, a Westpac Banking Corp. and Melbourne Institute survey showed.

Today’s housing “result was distorted by disruptions from the January floods, which devastated Queensland and impacted parts of New South Wales and Victoria,” Westpac economists led by Bill Evans said in a report after the release.

Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens held the benchmark interest rate at 4.75 percent for a third meeting this month, citing weaker consumer spending and higher savings. The governor has said the bank will look through the economic impact of torrential rains in Queensland that affected about 30,000 properties, shut coal mines, cut rail lines and damaged crops.

The Australian dollar fell after the data, trading at $1.0081 at 12:51 p.m. in Sydney from $1.0099 in New York yesterday, and was set for its fifth daily decline.

The total value of loans declined 5.3 percent to A$20.3 billion ($20.5 billion) in January, today’s report showed.

Value of Lending

The value of lending to owner-occupiers dropped 4.6 percent, the report showed. The value of loans to investors who plan to rent or resell homes declined 6.8 percent.

First-time home buyers accounted for 15.2 percent of dwellings that were financed in January, down from 15.8 percent in December and lower than 21 percent a year earlier, the report showed today.

Australian consumer confidence fell to a nine-month low in March, the survey of 1,200 consumers taken Feb. 28-March 6 and released in Sydney today showed, with the largest drop of 6.8 percent coming in a gauge reflecting family finances over the next 12 months.

“We expect that the key negative for households, which is highlighted by the prominence of budget/taxation in their assessments, relates to the government’s commitment to introducing a price on carbon by July next year,” Evans said in a statement.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Feb. 24 the government intends to set a price on carbon emissions from July next year before moving to an emissions trading plan. Her support fell to a record low in a Newspoll published in the Australian newspaper yesterday as voters rejected the plans.

Source http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-03-08/australia-s-home-loan-approvals-consumer-confidence-decline.html