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SAS

SAS posts new loss after 'horrifying' year

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
SAS posts new loss after 'horrifying' year

Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) saw its troubles deepen on Wednesday as it reported a loss for the sixth quarter in succession.

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The company, which had described 2008 as a "horrifying" year after experiencing technical problems with its fleet and a deadly crash in Madrid, predicted a difficult 2009 as passenger numbers dwindle amid the global economic crisis.

The airline posted a full-year loss in 2008.

But in the January-March period this year, Scandinavian Airlines System, majority owned by the Danish, Norwegian and Swedish states, reduced its net loss to 748 million kronor ($91 million).

In the same period a year earlier, it registered a loss of 1.16 billion.

SAS' operating loss widened, however, from 513 million a year ago to 747 million.

The company's share price was down by 5.75 percent at 3.44 kronor in mid-afternoon trading on the Stockholm exchange, as the overall market was down by 4.75 percent.

The carrier completed a six-billion-kronor share issue in April.

"The entire aviation industry, which is one of the global industries that is most sensitive to economic fluctuations, is experiencing major problems, one of the consequences of which has been extensive losses," SAS chief

executive Mats Jansson said in a statement.

In a bid to reduce its costs, SAS, which is divided into three national entities (SAS Denmark, SAS Norway and SAS Sweden), has been focusing on its Nordic operations.

In January, it sold its subsidiary Spanair to a consortium of Spanish investors for the symbolic sum of one euro.

Under its restructuring plan, dubbed "Core SAS," the company has announced 3,000 job cuts and reduced its workforce by another 5,600 when airBaltic and Spanair were sold.

The restructuring plan unveiled in February is aimed at saving 4 billion kronor by 2011.

Since the start of the crisis last year, the airline has cancelled almost 40 percent of its routes.

In the first quarter, it had 5.7 million passengers, compared to 6.8 million a year earlier.

Established in 1946, SAS has a 40 percent share of the northern European civil aviation market.

The company has regularly been the target of takeover rumours, with Germany's leading airline Lufthansa long mentioned as a possible rescuer.

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