• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

UPDATE 2-BA slashes spending as passengers fall again

Fri Jul 3, 2009 11:47am EDT

Stocks

   

* Capex cut to 580 mln stg in 2009/10, from 725 mln

* Says June traffic down 3.8 pct, premium off 14.9 pct

* Ryanair passengers up 13 percent

* BA shares up 5.5 percent, Ryanair up 0.6 pct

(Recasts, adds detail, shares, Ryanair)

By John Bowker

LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - British Airways (BA) (BAY.L) said it had cut its spending plans by 20 percent for the current year as it prepared for a lengthy industry downturn and reported that passenger numbers had fallen again.

The carrier said it had reduced its capital expenditure to 580 million pounds ($951.9 million) for the year to the end of March 2010, down from 725 million, and pencilled in a similar number for the following year.

The spending cuts included the deferral of orders for 12 Airbus A380 aircraft for up to two years.

"We have renegotiated a delivery schedule... the demand we expected in 2012 will now arrive later," BA head of investor relations George Stinnes told reporters, adding that the firm still expected to have 1 billion pounds in cash by March 2010.

BA shares closed the day up 5.5 percent at 126 pence a share, valuing the firm at 1.44 billion pounds.

The carrier, currently locked in talks with trade unions in a desperate bid to wring cost cuts from staff, said it carried 3.8 percent fewer passengers in June than in the same month last year, including a near 15 percent fall in premium, or business, traffic.

The company said its long-running falls in traffic had stabilised in recent months, while Irish budget airline Ryanair (RYA.I) reported its latest rise in numbers -- up 13 percent for June to 5.84 million. [ID:nWLB4768]

BA's load factor, a measure of how well it fills planes, was down 1.8 percent at 79.6 percent, while Ryanair's was up 1 percent at 85 percent.

Ryanair closed the session up 1.35 pct. ($1=.6093 Pound) (Reporting by John Bowker; editing by Myles Neligan and Karen Foster)



More from Reuters

 Demonstrator holds a signboard with a slogan "Bla bla bla ACT NOW" during a rally outside the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen December 12, 2009. REUTERS/Christian Charisius

"Polluters are given rights to continue their dirty habits"

A climate change scientist blasts proposals for a cap and trade system, arguing it allows dirty industries to continue polluting, instead of rewarding innovation.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is pictured at his Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on his nomination to continue as Chairman of the Board of Governors, on Capitol Hill in Washington, December 3, 2009. REUTERS/Jason Reed

    No great expectations

    Investors are getting antsy about when the Fed will tighten its purse strings, now that the economy appears to be coming back to life.   Full Article 

    Indian woman mourns death of her relative killed in tsunami in Cuddalore. When an earthquake of magnitude 9.15 struck off Indonesia's Aceh province on December, 26, 2004, it triggered a huge tsuanmi that raced across the Indian Ocean and hit Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India. The worst natural disaster of the decade left 230,000 people dead or missing. Taken on December 28, 2004 by Arko Datta

    Pictures that defined a decade

    A woman's grief amid the tsunami devastation and one woman's fight against police in the Amazon are among the indelible Reuters images of the last 10 years.  Slideshow