Money - International
United Airlines says it lost US$7.1b in 2020 on Covid-19 hit
A United Airlines passenger jet takes off with New York City as a backdrop, at Newark Liberty International Airport, New Jersey December 6, 2019. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

NEW YORK, Jan 21 — United Airlines yesterday reported it took a hefty loss in 2020 following the devastating hit Covid-19 did to travel, but the carrier eyed a partial recovery in 2021.

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United reported an annual loss of US$7.1 billion (RM28.6 billion) compared with profits of US$3.0 billion in 2019. The big US carrier said it expects 2021 to be a "transition” year thanks to coronavirus vaccines as it pledged to exceed pre-Covid profit margins by 2023.

Revenues for last year fell 64.5 per cent to US$15.4 billion, the latest bruising data for a US airline after travel slowed to a trickle in March at the height of coronavirus restrictions before recovering partly later in the year.

All major US carriers lost significant sums in 2020, and to reduce costs, airlines have taken planes out of service and lowered employee headcount, in some cases through voluntary retirement incentives.

They have also taken on billions of dollars in debt to ride out the downturn.

United Chief Executive Scott Kirby said the company’s response to the crisis was effective in repositioning the company for the long haul, pledging that United would emerge from the downturn "better, stronger and more profitable than ever.”

The carrier estimated its fourth-quarter cash burn at US$33 million per-day, up from the US$25 million lost per-day in the second quarter.

But United also pointed to what it called "core cash burn” that removed interest costs and some other types of payments and left the cash burn at US$19 million a day, down from US$24 million a day in the second quarter.

United reported a US$1.9 billion quarterly loss for the final three months of 2020, compared with profits of US$641 million in the year-ago period.

The carrier said it expects operating revenue to be down 65 to 70 per cent in the first quarter of 2021.

An efficient rollout of coronavirus vaccines could lead to a faster recovery, but "the company is not including this potential improvement in its first quarter 2021 revenue outlook,” United said.

Shares of United fell 1.9 per cent to US$44.32 in after-hours trading. — AFP

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