Airlines struggle to take off in face of $300bn debt headwinds - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
新型冠状病毒

Airlines struggle to take off in face of $300bn debt headwinds

Recovery may take years as industry grapples with rescue finance and state loan bills
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":13.91,"text":"The world’s largest airlines have built up a mountain of more than $300bn in net debt, a sign the pandemic will hamper recovery for years as carriers face paying back huge bills from rescue financing and state support. "}],[{"start":28.810000000000002,"text":"With hopes of a limited restart to travel in the summer, attention is turning to how quickly airlines can heal their balance sheets after the biggest crisis in aviation history. "}],[{"start":40.09,"text":"“Liquidity is and has been of great importance to always make sure we have enough cash to manage the situation,” easyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren told the Financial Times. "}],[{"start":51.95,"text":"But there is now a big price to pay after shareholders, debt markets and state support schemes provided essential liquidity to help the industry survive a collapse in passenger numbers and avoid widespread corporate failures. "}],[{"start":66.4,"text":"Although companies are sitting on cash and short-term investments of $140bn, up from $90bn at the start of the year, their net debt has also risen by $60bn over the same time to $320bn, according to FT analysis using FactSet data of the balance sheets of the 50 biggest airlines. "}],[{"start":89.01,"text":"The four big US carriers — United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines — have led the way in raising money, bolstered by more than $60bn of government aid. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":103.60000000000001,"text":"In Europe, flag carriers Air France-KLM and Lufthansa have been shored up by billions of euros in state support, while British Airways owner IAG tapped shareholders for €2.75bn, received a £2bn state-backed loan from the UK and raised €1.2bn in a bond issue this week. "}],[{"start":126.38000000000001,"text":"Airlines came into the crisis in broadly better shape than before the financial crash in 2008, allowing them to raise billions quickly, according to Jonathan Root, a senior vice-president at rating agency Moody’s. "}],[{"start":141.07000000000002,"text":"“Credit markets were there for the companies from day one,” he said. "},{"start":145.36200000000002,"text":"“If this was 2008, we would be having a different discussion today. ”"}],[{"start":151.03000000000003,"text":"Airlines raised $42.6bn in the debt markets in 2020, the most on record, according to data provider Dealogic. "}],[{"start":161.02000000000004,"text":"This month American Airlines launched an industry-record $10bn debt deal that underscored how low-interest rates have spurred investors to hunt for yield even in industries that have been badly hit by the crisis. "}],[{"start":174.98000000000005,"text":"“We have been surprised, and I think the industry has been surprised, how well supported a lot of the companies have been,” said Rachel Gerrish, a director at S&P Global Ratings. "}],[{"start":187.20000000000005,"text":"However, the support will be needed for longer than many in the industry had hoped as the outlook for air travel is uncertain this year despite the successful vaccination campaigns in many key markets. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":199.92000000000004,"text":"The International Air Transport Association has said carriers could burn through $95bn of cash in 2021 and warned that its forecast that the industry could turn cash positive by year-end may prove too optimistic. "}],[{"start":215.09000000000003,"text":"“Cash is essential today and the industry is going to need more cash as we go through this year to survive. "},{"start":222.04400000000004,"text":"But . . . a lot of that will probably come in the form of more debt,” said Iata chief economist Brian Pearce. "}],[{"start":229.01000000000002,"text":"Once passengers are finally able to return to the skies, companies can start trying to improve their balance sheets. "},{"start":236.47700000000003,"text":"“The ability to repay debt has always been a focus,” easyJet’s Lundgren said. "}],[{"start":242.14000000000001,"text":"He said a recent £1.4bn UK government-backed loan was particularly useful as it allowed the airline to pay back some short-term loans and improve its debt maturity profile. "}],[{"start":255.17000000000002,"text":"“Any debt we take on we want to repay, we want to get back into the position we were in before going into this,” he added. "}],[{"start":263.02000000000004,"text":"The next year is also expected to single out the strongest carriers, such as Michael O’Leary’s Ryanair, that have relatively low costs and flexibility to respond to the flying recovery, while rivals are weighed down by the debt struggle. "}],[{"start":278.21000000000004,"text":"Daniel Roeska, an aviation analyst at Bernstein, said airlines with the highest debt would have to reduce their balance sheet “scars” before they become attractive again for investors. "}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":290.42,"text":"O’Leary offered a cruder analysis, calling some European airlines “state-aid junkies”. "},{"start":296.67400000000004,"text":"His airline has opened court proceedings to challenge European government bailouts. "}],[{"start":302.54,"text":"In the US, however, high debt loads may not be such a problem as the big groups are among the most profitable. "}],[{"start":310.65000000000003,"text":"Moody’s Root said if a vaccine could be widely distributed this year, then US airlines would be able to repay “a large portion of the debt that’s been incurred”. "}],[{"start":321.16,"text":"The weakest groups, and those without the luxury of significant government support, face a bleaker future. "},{"start":328.11400000000003,"text":"Norwegian, long one of Europe’s most vulnerable airlines because of its high debt, filed for bankruptcy on November 18. "}],[{"start":337.26000000000005,"text":"But regardless of strategy or balance sheets, “there is not going to be a lot of free cash flow available for investments in fleet or the product”, Iata’s Pearce said, as airlines are still exposed to factors beyond their control. "}],[{"start":351.38000000000005,"text":"Etihad’s chief executive Tony Douglas told the FT he was planning for a recovery in the second half of the year as vaccines are rolled out, but added “almost every time we revisit what’s going on, it changes”. "}],[{"start":365.61000000000007,"text":"Additional reporting by Chris Campbell "}],[{"start":368.1600000000001,"text":""}]],"url":"https://creatives.ftacademy.cn/album/001091874-1616399392.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

德黑兰实况:爆炸声与逃离的人群

人们普遍感到恐惧与震惊。有人在彻夜未眠后正在逃离这座城市。官员们试图安抚公众,强调基本民生用品会持续供应。

“欧佩克+”承诺增产但市场预计油价将上涨

“欧佩克+”同意自4月起每日增产20.6万桶,但分析师警告称,若伊朗持续冲突导致供应中断,增产对市场的影响将十分有限。

哈梅内伊之后,谁将统治伊朗?

据称新最高领袖的继任程序将按宪法规定进行,过渡期间将由一个三人临时委员会负责领导。目前并无明显的最高领袖接班热门人选。

特朗普在中东的“史诗豪赌”

特朗普对伊朗发起的战争以推翻政权为目标,是他任期内采取的最大规模的干预行动,预示着中东地区将陷入巨大混乱。

物种的未来——“非自然选择”

遗传学家兼企业家阿德里安•伍尔夫森主张,基因组工程与AI将使我们得以设计出超越自然界极限的生物体。

硅谷亿万富豪砸重金改写美国的人工智能规则

中期选举之争有望演变为新兴技术的角力战场。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×