Emirates Airline 2013 Profit Rises 43%
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Emirates Airline 2013 Profit Rises 43%

Emirates Airline 2013 Profit Rises 43%

Emirates made a profit of Dhs3.3 billion for the fiscal year ending March 31, it said in a statement.

Gulf Business

Emirates, Dubai’s flagship airline, reported a 43 per cent jump in 2013 net profit on Thursday helped by higher revenue and lower fuel costs although runway maintenance work will impact income this year.

The world’s fourth carrier of international passengers posted a profit of Dhs3.3 billion ($898.4 million) for the year to March 31 up from 2.3 billion a year earlier, it said in a statement.

The world’s biggest customer of the Airbus A380 superjumbo said profit for the wider Emirates Group, which includes airline services arm Dnata, rose 32 per cent to Dhs4.1 billion.

“It’s been a good year. There was growth in our business all round and fuel costs fell by about four per cent last year, which helped,” Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, chairman of Emirates, told a news conference.

Revenue grew 13 per cent at both the airline and group level, to Dhs82.6 billion and Dhs87.8 billion, respectively.

Sheikh Ahmed warned that upgrade work at Dubai International Airport would mean the airline would lose Dhs1 billion of revenue in 2014.

This reiterates an estimate the airline’s president, Tim Clark, gave last month. Dubai plans around 80 days of work to upgrade and refurbish the airport’s two runways, starting in May.

Emirates and its home base Dubai are betting that its location – a third of the world’s population is within a 4-hour flight radius – will continue to attract passenger traffic away from hubs such as London, New York and Singapore.

The carrier, along with other regional giants Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways, are aggressively expanding, drawing the ire of European counterparts who complain Gulf airlines receive preferential treatment from their governments.

“Our competition continues to lobby governments to pressure us. We just have to stay ahead of the others, which is why we are investing so much into our businesses,” Sheikh Ahmed said, adding Emirates invested Dhs22 billion into its business last year.

Seat occupancy, or seat factor, averaged 79.4 per cent, the airline said, describing this as “nearly consistent” with the previous year despite a 15-per cent increase in seat capacity measured by available seat kilometres.

Emirates paid a dividend of around Dhs1 billion to Investment Corporation of Dubai, the state investment vehicle which owns stakes in a host of Dubai companies. This was broadly in line with the figure for 2012, Emirates said.


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