Jump to content
MalaysianWings - Malaysia's Premier Aviation Portal
Sign in to follow this  
Naim

Malaysia Airlines says eyeing mergers as fuel soars

Recommended Posts

UPDATE 2-Malaysia Airlines says eyeing mergers as fuel soars

Wed Apr 23, 2008 11:51pm EDT

 

KUALA LUMPUR, April 24 (Reuters) - Flag carrier Malaysian Airline System (MASM.KL: Quote, Profile, Research) is considering possible mergers, as the industry struggles to cope with soaring fuel prices and softer demand, Chief Executive Idris Jala said on Thursday.

 

The company would look at possible partners world-wide but Idris stressed he was only looking at opportunities and was not in any talks.

 

"It's very, very early days. We are just only looking at the landscape. We haven't identified (anyone). We have looked at all those airlines that we're working with today. They're probably looking at us too."

 

Crude oil CLc1 is trading at record highs near $120 a barrel, hitting airlines and prompting mergers, including the planned union of Delta Air Lines (DAL.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Northwest Airlines (NWA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and the search for a partner for troubled Alitalia (AZPIa.MI: Quote, Profile, Research).

 

The International Air Transport Association, in downgrading its 2008 industry profit forecast recently for a second time in four months, called for more mergers saying the sector was overcrowded.

 

Idris said the industry in Asia would be plagued by overcapacity in five years' time and that state-controlled Malaysia Airlines would prefer a partner that helped raise revenues rather than just lowering costs.

 

"If you take a look at the orders of aircraft today -- the orders of aircraft against demand -- it will show in the next five years, there will be a period of overcapacity," he told reporters.

 

He ruled out any interest in codeshare partner Alitalia but said he planned to continue the codeshare arrangement.

 

"I prefer to look for someone that is not like us," he told an airline conference.

 

Mergers between airlines are traditionally difficult because many are controlled by governments who wish to keep them as national carriers.

 

Malaysian state funds control a combined 90.4 percent in the airline.

 

Malaysia Airlines had hedged about 43 percent of its fuel needs at around $89 a barrel and was reviewing its current level of fuel surcharge, Idris said. (Reporting by Liau Y-Sing, writing by Mark Bendeich; Editing By Ovais Subhani and Lincoln Feast)

http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssIndustr...R33035820080424

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Guess, IJ is feeling some sort of heat in his neck !!! :blink:

 

It's really the only way to go....see also seperate topic on Easyjet: "small" airlines cannot cope with these fuelprices anymore... :(

 

Look at AF-KL and LH-LX: still healthy companies now, with synergies of costs.

 

(bad news for spotters: less airlines to photograph, though)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Sign in to follow this  

×
×
  • Create New...