Cathay Pacific announces 99% traffic drop

Bloomberg

Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. carried just 37,815 passengers in November, down 98.6% from a year earlier, and warned that its second-half losses will be significantly worse than the $1.3 billion hemorrhage in the first six months.
Average passenger capacity in the second half is only likely to be 8.4% of pre-pandemic levels, compared with 34.3% in the first half, the Hong Kong-based carrier said. Restructuring and impairment costs will add to the pressure on earnings as demand remains elusive.
Cathay’s passenger traffic has been down around 99% every month since April as Covid-19 and related travel restrictions decimated demand.
November revenue passenger kilometers fell 97.9% from a year earlier, while passenger load factor was just 18.5%. The airline carried 116,853 tons of cargo and mail, down 34.3%, with a load factor of 77.7%.

“We are still not seeing any meaningful improvement in our passenger business. On average, we carried just 1,261 passengers per day” — Ronald Lam

Lam said Cathay has introduced chartered freighter flights to Riyadh and a seasonal cargo service to Australia’s Hobart will start in mid-December for exports of Tasmanian produce to Asia. The International Air Transport Association has re-certified the airline with its CEIV Pharma accreditation to ship temperature-controlled products such as vaccines.

Cathay expects to operate at about 9% of pre-pandemic passenger capacity this month and slightly above 10% in January, Lam said.

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