May 26, 2009 at 10:56 am
Profits jump at Virgin Atlantic
Virgin’s Steve Ridgway on the company’s success
Virgin Atlantic has reported a sharp rise in profits in the year to the end of February, bucking the trend seen by other airlines.
Annual pre-tax profits reached £68.4m ($109m), nearly double the £34.8m seen in the year earlier.
It said the results had been helped by a rise in premium
*****
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8067640.stm
******
9W posts Q4 profit
Mumbai: Jet Airways has clocked a net profit of Rs 53 crore in the fourth quarter of 2008-09.
The private air carrier had posted a loss of Rs 221 crore in the year-ago period.
For FY’09, the airline clocked a loss of Rs 402 crore, the airline said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) on Monday. Jet had recorded a loss of Rs 253 crore in the year-ago period
http://www.financialexpress.com/news/jet-airways-q4-profit-at-rs-53-cr/465538/
****
Some optimistic news from our industry. 🙂
By: rdc1000 - 27th May 2009 at 10:45
Here’s an interesting take on it though…
Virgin shareholder SIA views full-year performance differently
David Kaminski-Morrow, London (26May09, 22:12 GMT, 260 words)Virgin Atlantic Airways’ disclosure today of an increased pre-tax profit appears at odds with the financial performance of the company as seen by investor Singapore Airlines, which owns 49% of the UK long-haul carrier.
While Virgin declared that it doubled its pre-tax figure to more than £68 million ($108 million) in the year to February 2009, Singapore Airlines points out that Virgin does not apply international financial reporting standards (IFRS) but instead still prepares its accounts under UK generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
Singapore Airlines, in its own recently-released full-year figures, stated that its associated companies lost S$106 million ($73 million) in the fourth quarter to March 2009.
“That’s largely coming out of our investment in Virgin Atlantic,” said Singapore Airlines senior vice-president for finance Chan Hon Chew.
Chan added that, as a private company, Virgin Atlantic was able to prepare its finances under GAAP, while listed European Union companies must use IFRS.
Singapore Airlines chief Chew Choon Seng pointed out that Virgin Atlantic contributed S$400,000 ($276,000) over the two halves of the year because it was responsible for a “big part” of the first-half share of profits from associates.
Virgin’s statement on its financial performance today does not indicate the accounting standard used.
But the airline says it generated the pre-tax profit of £68.4 million, up from £34.8 million in the previous year, despite the volatile price of fuel.
Virgin Atlantic has not disclosed a figure for retained profit for the year in its statement. For the previous financial year it posted a retained profit of nearly £48 million.
Source: Air Transport Intelligence news
By: OneLeft - 26th May 2009 at 16:14
Profits jump at Virgin Atlantic
Good news indeed, and refreshing in among all the doom and gloom.
1L.