Iberia Drags International Airlines Group into Red
International Airlines Group has reported an operating loss of €23 million before exceptional items for the year to December 31st. While British Airways made an operating profit of €347 million during the period, the group was hamstrung by Spanish carrier Iberia, which made an operating loss of €351 million.
Willie Walsh, IAG chief executive, said: “Last year was a year of transformation for IAG - we bought bmi and integrated it into British Airways and initiated our restructuring of Iberia. “Our operating performance was solid and the €23 million loss before exceptional items was better than our guidance to the market.”
There was a significant impact on the results from exceptional and non-operating items leading to a pre-tax loss of €997 million. These items include provision for restructuring and impairment costs in Iberia and non-cash pension accounting requirements.
Revenue for the year was up 10.9 percent to €18.1 billion, including €872 million or 5.4 percent currency impact. Passenger unit revenue for the year was also up 9.4 percent, on top of volume increases of 2.8 percent.
Despite three months of negotiations between Iberia and its trade unions, no agreement has been reached on an initial restructuring plan. Therefore, IAG has announced that Iberia will proceed with a 15 percent cut in capacity and has started the formal collective redundancy process which will affect 3,807 jobs.