European airlines could be forced to merge if the coronavirus crisis
lasts much longer
European airlines could be forced to merge if
the coronavirus crisis lasts much longer, according to a senior
analyst.
Mark Manduca, associate director of Europe, the Middle East and
Africa research at Citi, said Europe's six biggest carriers were burning through
cash at an "astonishing rate" as businesses and consumers cancel travel plans,
which could hasten dealmaking in the industry.
"The lack of visibility is
unprecedented," Manduca said. "This is an industry that doesn't tolerate revenue
shortfall. We could see consolidation start to take place as airlines struggle
to cut costs fast enough to keep up with the fall in revenue."
A
three-month shutdown would inflate Air France-KLM's net debt to 7.7 times
earnings, and increase Lufthansa's multiple to 12.4 times, Manduca
estimated.
Airlines globally are being pushed into emergency cost-cutting
measures to protect profits amid plunging passenger numbers. These include
grounding flights, cutting routes and implementing hiring freezes. The
International Air Transport Association has said the industry could take a hit
of up to $113 billion from the disruption.
Air France-KLM AF, -4.89% on
Tuesday became the latest to reveal the extent of the damage from the spreading
virus as it reported a drop in group passenger numbers for February compared
with a year ago.
The Franco-Dutch carrier said the coming months will be
"more impacted" given the expansion of Covid-19 in other parts of the world and
the extension of capacity reduction. Shares in Air France-KLM, which have fallen
44% in the year to date, were trading up 5.10% at 11:45 a.m. GMT.
Air
France-KLM has substantial gross cash on its balance sheet (€3.7 billion at
year-end) and €1.8 billion of committed facilities (combined, about 20% of
revenues), although its financial position is not as strong as its peers,
analysts at investment bank Liberum said.
Business travel, the most
lucrative part of the industry, has been severely hit as some of Europe's
biggest companies ban or restrict travel for employees and major conferences are
axed.
Nestlé told more than 290,000 employees to suspend all
international business travel until March 15, and requested that all domestic
trips be skipped whenever possible for now. Last month, the cancellation of
technology conference Mobile World Congress cost Barcelona an estimated $546
million in lost revenue.
"There is going to be lasting damage done to the
airline sector-consolidation in European short haul will accelerate," said Neil
Wilson, chief market analyst at trading platform Markets.com.
European
airlines were already struggling with profitability before the coronavirus
outbreak, as they grappled with rising fuel prices, excess capacity and intense
competition from low-cost carriers.
Compared with North American
airlines, the European aviation sector is more fragmented and less profitable.
However, attempts to build scale and cut costs through mergers have been impeded
by political and regulatory obstacles.
Of the roughly $7 billion of net
profit that the European carriers made in 2019, the lion's share was held by the
top six carriers. "In fact the bottom 35% of the European short-haul market
broke even or lost money; a fairly sobering fact...and one can but ponder as to
the state of these very same balance sheets," Manduca said.
Abonner på:
Legg inn kommentarer (Atom)
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.