Politics

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

REUTERS SHOWCASE

Hefty Fine

Hefty Fine

Tribunal orders fined cement firms to pay $109 million fee.  Full Article 

Share Sale

Share Sale

Tata Tele (Maharashtra) share sale cancelled.  Full Article | Related Story 

Tech Buzz

Tech Buzz

Google's wearable Glass gadget: cool or creepy?  Full Article 

Biggest Investors

Biggest Investors

China, India to be world's two biggest investors by 2030: World Bank.  Full Article 

ITC Results

ITC Results

ITC quarterly profit rises 19.5 pct, meets estimates.  Full Article 

Gold Market

Gold Market

Column - China, India demand not enough to save gold: Clyde Russell.  Full Article 

Chit Fund Scam

Chit Fund Scam

Fund scams target Indians beyond the reach of banks.  Full Article 

Foreign Inflows

Foreign Inflows

Foreign investors buy most Indian stocks in 3 months.  Full Article 

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Confused while buying stocks? Get buy, sell or hold recommendations from VantageTrade.  Full Coverage 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

Jet Airways beats street as Q2 loss narrows sharply

Stocks

   
Track BSE Sectoral Indices

Track Markets: BSE Sectoral Indices

Track and analyse performance of all BSE sectoral indices and other global indices on a single page.   Full Coverage 

Ground staff guide a Jet Airways aircraft towards a gate on the tarmac at Bengaluru International Airport in Bangalore March 5, 2012. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash/Files

Ground staff guide a Jet Airways aircraft towards a gate on the tarmac at Bengaluru International Airport in Bangalore March 5, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Vivek Prakash/Files

MUMBAI | Sat Nov 3, 2012 6:29am IST

MUMBAI (Reuters) - Jet Airways India Ltd(JET.NS), India's biggest airline, beat estimates with a 86 percent cut in its second-quarter losses thanks to a jump in operating income, sending its shares as much as 5.5 percent higher.

Jet, which posted its first quarterly profit in 18 months last quarter, has benefited from a shutdown at rival Kingfisher Airlines(KING.NS) which has eased over capacity and allowed other airlines to increase their fares in India's competitive airline industry.

India's airlines have suffered from high fuel costs, below-cost fares in a highly competitive market and tough regulations in one of the fastest growing markets in the world.

"Improvement in yields has helped the group to post an operating profit," Nikos Kardassis, chief executive officer, said in a statement. "However, lean season, slowdown in industry passenger traffic due to weakened economic scenario, high fuel prices coupled with high rupee depreciation versus the dollar has pulled the overall results down."

Kingfisher, saddled with $1.4 billion in debt, has not flown since October 1. It had been steadily cutting flights for the past year, driving passengers to carriers such as Jet, SpiceJet and privately held Indigo.

Jet said its EBITDAR (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortisation and aircraft rent) margin at its domestic operations was 9.3 percent, against a negative margin of 8.1 percent in the year-ago quarter.

The airline will continue its drive to discontinue loss-making routes and add capacity to performing sectors, it said in a statement on Friday.

Jet said its net loss for the quarter to end-September was 997 million rupees, down from 7.14 billion the previous year, thanks to a 26 percent jump in income from operations. Expectations were for a net loss of about 2.7 billion rupees, traders told Reuters.

Shares in the airline, valued at $563 million by the market, closed up 3.1 percent on a Mumbai market that ended 1 percent higher.

(Reporting by Henry Foy; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.