sharetrader
Page 2015 of 2019 FirstFirst ... 10151515191519652005201120122013201420152016201720182019 LastLast
Results 20,141 to 20,150 of 20188

Thread: AIR - Air NZ.

  1. #20141
    Speedy Az winner69's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2001
    Location
    , , .
    Posts
    37,890

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Balance View Post
    Old news, w69.

    Was back in April and 150,000 passengers were affected - so rebooking etc etc.
    You are right again

    Saw RTX was down heaps cos engines going to be costly to fix and forgot that AIR had already mentioned this problem
    “ At the top of every bubble, everyone is convinced it's not yet a bubble.”

  2. #20142
    Guru Rawz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2020
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    3,954

    Default

    https://www.nzx.com/announcements/416946

    Special dividend of 6 cents. thats cool

    2023 Summary
    ·Earnings before other significant items and taxation of $585 million
    ·Statutory earnings before taxation of $574 million
    ·Operating revenue of $6.3 billion
    ·Domestic capacity at 94% of pre-Covid levels and International capacity at 71%
    ·Fully imputed special dividend of 6.0 cents per share declared for the 2023 financial year
    ·2023 Sustainability Report released

    Demand for air travel that exceeded expectations has led to a rapid recovery for Air New Zealand, which today announced a profit that will help fund aircraft, digital investments and facilities, building a stronger airline for New Zealand.
    The financial year began as borders were still reopening and aircraft were stored in the desert, and ended with the airline at 94 percent of pre-Covid domestic capacity. Having restored its international network, the airline carried out the biggest recruitment drive in its history and returned all aircraft to the skies.

    In line with market guidance provided in June 2023, Air New Zealand’s earnings before other significant items and taxation were $585 million for the 2023 financial year. Statutory earnings before taxation were $574 million, compared with a previous year loss of $810 million.
    In addition to introducing new aircraft, making digital enhancements for customers and staff, increasing wages for front line staff and starting work on a new engineering hangar, the airline will provide shareholders with a one-off, fully imputed special dividend of 6.0 cents per share2. The special nature of this dividend reflects the extraordinary 2023 operating environment, with strong pent-up levels of demand combined with industry-wide capacity constraints.

    The Board has also reviewed the airline’s capital management settings and has today announced a revised capital management framework, effective from the 2024 financial year.
    Air New Zealand Chair Dame Therese Walsh says the result is an important one given the critical role the airline plays in New Zealand both socially and economically.

    “We are proud of the result Air New Zealand has delivered this financial year, and of the value we have created for our shareholders.
    “This result would not have been possible without our remarkable team of Air New Zealanders. Their grit, determination and commitment to deliver exceptional service for our customers is second to none.”
    Chief Executive Officer Greg Foran said the result follows a year in which the airline balanced customer, staff, community, and shareholder needs, while making investments for the years ahead.

    “A strong Air New Zealand is good for New Zealand. We have rehired and trained in a tight labour market, lifted the starting wage for the airport teams to $30 an hour and improved the way we work with digital systems on the ground and in the air.

    “Restoring services to 500 flights a day is not only good for Kiwis who’ve been able to take that long planned holiday, but it has also brought tourist dollars back to the regions and supports exporters who rely on regular air freight.

    “We know increased costs and high demand have made flying more expensive. In the past year we put more aircraft and seats in the air, so there are more choices for customers which helps alleviate the cost of flying. At the same time, our own costs continue to rise and the reality is that airfares are unlikely to return to pre-pandemic levels.

    “After several volatile years it’s great to be back in the black and standing on our own two feet especially given we have more than $3.5 billion in aircraft investment coming over the next five years.
    “Today we also announced an order for two new ATR turboprop aircraft for regional routes, as well as two new Airbus A321neos for our international short-haul network. That’s in addition to the existing domestic Airbus A321neo orders, and the eight new Boeing 787 Dreamliners we have coming into the fleet as we retire our Boeing 777-300s over time. And we’re retrofitting our 14 787’s with the new Business Premier LuxeTM and refreshed cabin product.

    “We’re making progress on the things that matter to customers. Contact centre wait times have, on average, reduced by 75 percent since December, we’ve introduced an enhanced app, and we’ve had a step change in on time performance and more importantly, a reduction in cancellations. This June we were one of the best airlines in the Asia Pacific region at arriving on time, so we have momentum.

    “We want all our customers to have a great experience and we know that over the past year we haven’t got that right every time. We were tested during the Auckland floods and Cyclone Gabrielle, but pleased to be able to help the Napier and Gisborne communities with direct flights when roads linking the cities were washed away.

    “Air New Zealand has also released its annual Sustainability Report today, which highlights how important and challenging the work we’re doing in this area is. This is a key focus for the business, with work underway to select a flight route for the airline’s first next generation aircraft and the announcement of a sustainable aviation fuel feasibility study alongside the New Zealand Government.

    “Our entire whānau would like to thank our customers who have been patient and loyal while we emerged from the global pandemic. We’ve made significant progress in the past year, emerging as a strong Air New Zealand, which is good for the country.”
    Revised capital management framework

    The Board has also reviewed the airline’s capital management settings, with a particular focus on the appropriate liquidity and leverage targets that would enable the airline to maintain investment grade credit rating metrics, as well as consideration of future shareholder distribution parameters. The revised capital management framework is effective from the 2024 financial year and further information can be found here.


    Outlook
    The airline notes that the 2023 financial year was particularly unique with significant customer demand, constrained market capacity and lower fuel prices in the second half, and as such, we believe the 2024 financial year will be more reflective of future financial performance.

    Looking ahead to the first half of the 2024 financial year, customer demand remains strong across our markets. We are mindful of the uncertain economic environment however and acknowledge a number of factors that may impact future customer demand and profitability. These factors include increased international competition, volatile fuel prices, a weaker New Zealand dollar, ongoing wage inflation and increased airport charges.
    Given the uncertainty and volatility of some of these macroeconomic factors, the airline will not be providing guidance at this time.


    Ends
    Last edited by Rawz; 24-08-2023 at 09:00 AM.

  3. #20143
    Legend Balance's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Posts
    21,630

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Rawz View Post
    https://www.nzx.com/announcements/416946

    Special dividend of 6 cents. thats cool
    Market consensus was 4 cps - nice surprise for shareholders.

    And fully imputed!
    Last edited by Balance; 24-08-2023 at 09:33 AM.

  4. #20144
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Posts
    514

    Default

    At 76c a share buy in. Not bad at all. I had a nibble recently and thought I’d come to regret it but pretty happy with the special dividend. Domestic has historically always been the money maker. Not overly impressed with the international though given competition really just ramping up along with fuel prices.

  5. #20145
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2021
    Posts
    504

    Default

    3billlions share....6c dividend is around $200m ...😄😄

    Would be better do a share buyback

  6. #20146
    Member Fortunecookie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2023
    Posts
    293

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by X-men View Post
    3billlions share....6c dividend is around $200m ...😄😄

    Would be better do a share buyback
    I think they are the optimal cap structure so doubt they will do a buyback. Qantas are at about 70/30 so assume the reason they went down this path.

  7. #20147
    Guru
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Auckland, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    3,243

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by X-men View Post
    3billlions share....6c dividend is around $200m ...����

    Would be better do a share buyback
    The government needed the dividend.

  8. #20148
    Member
    Join Date
    May 2021
    Posts
    104

    Default

    Finally seeing some SP movement after announcement. Might get to 90 c .... Remember the $3 days ?

  9. #20149
    Guru
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Bolivia.
    Posts
    4,956

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Charlie View Post
    Finally seeing some SP movement after announcement. Might get to 90 c .... Remember the $3 days ?
    Remember they have 3x the number of shares on issue than those $3 days......

  10. #20150
    Reincarnated Panthera Snow Leopard's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Private Universe
    Posts
    5,861

    Default

    Don't tell anyone, but I bough some when they announced the result and currently I am very happy with the price since.

    Last day tomorrow to buy for that 6c divvy and then hope that it does not do a 'Heartland' and drop 9c on paying 6c.


    But I remain firmly of the belief that you should never invest in airlines.
    om mani peme hum

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •