Alan Joyce pulled Qantas Airways Ltd. back from the brink once before. Now he’s signed up to do it again, but under much tougher circumstances.
The Irishman’s first revamp produced one of the fastest transformations in Australian corporate history. In the three years to 2017, Joyce turned unprecedented losses at Qantas into record profits by slashing jobs, costs and routes. Investors gorged on special dividends, share buybacks and a fivefold jump in the stock price.
But can he repeat the feat amid the worst crisis the world’s airline sector has ever seen? Qantas said yesterday Joyce has agreed to stay on as chief executive officer until at least June 2023 to oversee another three-year recovery attempt as the coronavirus paralyzes global travel.
So far, Joyce is following his playbook of old. He plans to cut at least 6,000 jobs, about 20% of the workforce, while some 15,000 employees will remain furloughed. He’s grounding the entire fleet of 12 giant Airbus A380s for at least three years and deferring a backlog of other aircraft deliveries.
“It reads like another transformation,” said Daniel Mueller, a fund manager at Vertium Asset Management in Sydney. “I don’t see any reason not to back him. He’s done one and now he’s going to do another.”
Joyce, who’s led Qantas since 2008, knows where to squeeze out costs and should be able to hit his expense-cutting targets, Mueller said.
Qantas shares tumbled 5% to A$3.98 at 10:15 a.m. Friday as trading resumed following the announcement. Joyce’s plan included raising as much as A$1.9 billion ($1.3 billion) in capital, including an institutional placement of A$1.36 billion.
The stock is down 44% this year.
History shows Joyce can live with unpopular decisions. In 2011, he grounded Qantas’s entire fleet worldwide to tackle a labor dispute at home. That left 80,000 passengers and 17 heads of state stranded.
This time round, Joyce aims to reduce A$15 billion in costs over three years and then deliver A$1 billion in annual savings from June 2023. Job cuts will target about 1,500 people on the ground including baggage handlers, at least 1,050 cabin crew and at least 220 pilots.
Still, this is nothing like the situations he’s turned around before. Joyce could be hamstrung by outbreaks of infections in Australia that deter passengers at the domestic business, which has long been the profit engine of the company. He also said yesterday that international travel won’t return in any substantial volumes until July next year. So not everyone’s convinced he can prevail.
Out of Control
“The operating outlook remains highly uncertain,” Citigroup Inc. analysts said in a note. “The path to recovery will be impacted by a multitude of factors beyond Qantas’s control.”
Those risks include a delay to the resumption of travel within Australia, where movement between some states is still restricted amid continued virus flareups, and the impact on the bottom line of cheaper airfares, Citigroup said.
Key to success will be a recovery at the domestic business and continuing profits at the loyalty division, Anthony Moulder, an analyst at Jefferies Group LLC, said in a note.
Qantas doesn’t face the same competitive threats that have scuppered carriers in other markets. It is the dominant airline in what’s essentially a two-player market. The main competitor, Virgin Australia Holdings Ltd., collapsed in April under close to A$7 billion of debt and is being auctioned by administrators.
Joyce’s turnaround plan “will make Qantas a stronger business, able to further increase profitability as traffic returns over the next few years,” Moulder said.
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