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SAS shares tumble as CEO says airline 'fighting for survival'
Airplanes of the Scandinavian Airlinesu00e2u20acu2122 SAS company park on ground at the Gardamoen Airport during a strike of pilots to contest wages and working hours in Oslo April 26, 2019. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

STOCKHOLM, Oct 26 ― Shares in Scandinavian airline SAS dropped yesterday after its chief executive said the company was fighting for its survival and must cut costs.

"When I see what the market looks like today, how our clients are changing, and the size of our debt, it's absolutely clear that we have to do things very differently,” Anko van der Werff, who took over as CEO in July, told Danish business newspaper Finans late on Sunday.

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"It is a fight to change SAS so that we have a future.”

SAS is facing several problems, including a permanent drop in business travel and costly collective labour agreements, he said.

Van der Werff said he had summoned the main unions for three months of negotiations aimed at cutting costs and increasing flexibility.

"This requires understanding and willingness from everyone... SAS needs to be competitive so we can survive, grow, and create jobs,” he said.

SAS shares fell 14 per cent yesterday.

The ailing airline cut 5,000 jobs last year ― representing 40 per cent of its workforce ― and announced in May this year a credit line of three billion kronor (RM1.45 billion) from the Danish and Swedish governments, its main shareholders, to get through the crisis.

That aid came on top of a first line of credit for the same amount and a capital increase in 2020. ― AFP

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