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PIA Breaks Even at Operational Level

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KARACHI: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has claimed that it has come out of losses at the operational level after quite a long time as its revenues slightly exceeded the operating cost in the quarter ended March 31, 2019.

“PIA has achieved breakeven at the operational level,” Adviser to PIA CEO Air Vice Marshal Noor Abbas told The Express Tribune. “It, however, may take three to four years to report a net profit.”

The state-owned airline’s revenue surged to an average of Rs8-8.5 billion a month in the January-March 2019 quarter compared to around Rs7 billion a month in the same period of last year. “The operating cost was slightly lower than the monthly revenue or was almost equal,” he said.

18 new planes, new routes planned for PIA

The adviser said a notable improvement in financial management came after the seat occupancy rate per flight increased to around 90% in the period under review compared to less than 70% in the corresponding period of previous year.

Moreover, the addition of four planes to the operational fleet after repair, which took more than a year, reduction in the number of employees, drastic reduction in the ticket reservation cost, increased load factor of cargo and increase in the number of flights on profit-making routes helped achieve these results.

“Such improvement in operations came following the change of management in November 2018 when Air Marshal Arshad Malik took charge as CEO of the airline,” he said. “PIA is doing well under the five-year business plan, which got approval of the cabinet very recently.”

He revealed that PIA had been saving roughly Rs1 billion a month since it acquired the new ticket reservation software from Turkey-based firm Hitit in October 2018. “The new reservation software is costing half of what PIA was paying to the US-based firm Saber.”

“The saving is playing a major role in turning around the airline,” he said.

Grounded planes return to air

The adviser said seven aircraft had been grounded for repair and maintenance at the time the new management took over the airline. Some of them had remained in the hangar for over a year due to lack of finances. “We have now put four of them in the operational fleet,” Abbas said.

PIA business plan to be ready by March

It became possible after the government extended sovereign guarantees for commercial loans worth Rs5.6 billion for repair and maintenance in February 2019.

“Another two grounded aircraft – Boing 777 AP-BHV and A-320 AP-BLV – will start flying by mid-May,” he said. “The required parts have arrived from original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) in the US and Europe.”

Cargo


load improves
He said the cargo load factor had also increased to over 70% these days compared to less than 50% about six months ago. “Accordingly, the share of revenue from cargo operations has increased to 7-8% in the total revenue compared to around 5% earlier,” he said.

New planes

He said the management had planned to increase the fleet to around 45 aircraft under the five-year business plan from 32 at present. “First of the new aircraft is expected to be acquired in the current calendar year.”

He, however, said it had not yet been decided whether the first aircraft would be narrow or wide-body plane. However, 60% of the 13 new aircraft would be narrow-body and the remaining would be wide-body.

HR rationalisation

He said the state-owned airline had started the process of human resources rationalisation. “We need to cut human resource by 25-30%. We may do so in the next two to three months. The rationalisation drive kicked off in January,” he said.

There are around 13,000 regular employees and another 3,000 outsourced employees of PIA.

He added the impact of HR rationalisation would not be at the mass level as 500-600 employees were leaving the organisation themselves every year including around 400 who were reaching the retirement age.

Routes rationalisation

He said PIA had increased the number of flights and started flying on around eight new international routes, mostly in the Middle East, since the change in management in November 2018. “PIA is also going to start flights on the Islamabad-Muscat route on April 23. This will be the ninth new route in less than six months.”

Besides, it has stopped and suspended flights on a couple of loss-making routes under the rationalisation programme.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1954858/2-pia-reaches-break-even-operating-profit/
 
PIA reaches break-even in operating profit

PIA-to-operate-three-weekly-flights-from-Karachi-to-Bangkok.jpg

کراچی: پی آئی اے انتظامیہ نے دعویٰ کیاہے کہ قومی ادارے میں طویل عرصے بعد مالی خسارے پر قابوپالیاگیا ہے اور 31مارچ کو ختم ہونے والی سہ ماہی میں انتظامی اخراجات کی نسبت ریونیو میں معمولی اضافہ ہوا ہے۔

پی آئی اے کے چیف ایگزیکٹو کے مشیر ایئروائس مارشل نورعباس نے ایکسپریس ٹریبیون کو بتایاکہ ادارے کے آپریشنل اخراجات اور ریونیو برابر ہوگئے ہیں، 3سے 4 میں ادارہ نفع کمانے کے قابل ہوجائے گا۔ قومی ادارے کا ریونیوپہلی سہ ماہی میں8سے 8.5ارب روپے ماہانہ پر پہنچ گیا جو گزشتہ سال اسی عرصے میں7ارب روپے ماہانہ تھا۔

فضائی بیڑے میں4طیاروں کا اضافہ، ملازمین کی تعداد میں کمی، ٹکٹ ریزرویشن کی لاگت میں کمی، کارگو بزنس میں اضافہ اور نفع بخش روٹ پر پروازوں کی تعداد میں اضافے سے نتائج حاصل کرنے میں مدد ملی جب کہ ترکی سے جدید سافٹ ویئر حاصل کیے جانے کے بعد سے صرف ٹکٹ ریزرویشن میں ماہانہ ایک ارب روپے کی بچت ہورہی ہے۔

1638698-pia-1555709503.jpg

پی آئی اے کو خسارے سے نکال لیا، انتظامیہ کا دعویٰ - ایکسپریس اردو
31مارچ کو ختم ہونے والی سہ ماہی میں انتظامی اخراجات کی نسبت ریونیو میں معمولی اضافہ ہوا ہے۔
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KARACHI:
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has claimed that it has come out of losses at the operational level after quite a long time as its revenues slightly exceeded the operating cost in the quarter ended March 31, 2019.

“PIA has achieved breakeven at the operational level,” Adviser to PIA CEO Air Vice Marshal Noor Abbas told The Express Tribune. “It, however, may take three to four years to report a net profit.”

The state-owned airline’s revenue surged to an average of Rs8-8.5 billion a month in the January-March 2019 quarter compared to around Rs7 billion a month in the same period of last year. “The operating cost was slightly lower than the monthly revenue or was almost equal,” he said.

The adviser said a notable improvement in financial management came after the seat occupancy rate per flight increased to around 90% in the period under review compared to less than 70% in the corresponding period of previous year.

Moreover, the addition of four planes to the operational fleet after repair, which took more than a year, reduction in the number of employees, drastic reduction in the ticket reservation cost, increased load factor of cargo and increase in the number of flights on profit-making routes helped achieve these results.

“Such improvement in operations came following the change of management in November 2018 when Air Marshal Arshad Malik took charge as CEO of the airline,” he said. “PIA is doing well under the five-year business plan, which got approval of the cabinet very recently.”

He revealed that PIA had been saving roughly Rs1 billion a month since it acquired the new ticket reservation software from Turkey-based firm Hitit in October 2018. “The new reservation software is costing half of what PIA was paying to the US-based firm Saber.”

“The saving is playing a major role in turning around the airline,” he said.

Grounded planes return to air
The adviser said seven aircraft had been grounded for repair and maintenance at the time the new management took over the airline. Some of them had remained in the hangar for over a year due to lack of finances. “We have now put four of them in the operational fleet,” Abbas said.

It became possible after the government extended sovereign guarantees for commercial loans worth Rs5.6 billion for repair and maintenance in February 2019.

“Another two grounded aircraft – Boing 777 AP-BHV and A-320 AP-BLV – will start flying by mid-May,” he said. “The required parts have arrived from original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) in the US and Europe.”

Cargo load improves
He said the cargo load factor had also increased to over 70% these days compared to less than 50% about six months ago. “Accordingly, the share of revenue from cargo operations has increased to 7-8% in the total revenue compared to around 5% earlier,” he said.

New planes
He said the management had planned to increase the fleet to around 45 aircraft under the five-year business plan from 32 at present. “First of the new aircraft is expected to be acquired in the current calendar year.”

He, however, said it had not yet been decided whether the first aircraft would be narrow or wide-body plane. However, 60% of the 13 new aircraft would be narrow-body and the remaining would be wide-body.


HR rationalisation
He said the state-owned airline had started the process of human resources rationalisation. “We need to cut human resource by 25-30%. We may do so in the next two to three months. The rationalisation drive kicked off in January,” he said.

There are around 13,000 regular employees and another 3,000 outsourced employees of PIA.

He added the impact of HR rationalisation would not be at the mass level as 500-600 employees were leaving the organisation themselves every year including around 400 who were reaching the retirement age.


Routes rationalisation
He said PIA had increased the number of flights and started flying on around eight new international routes, mostly in the Middle East, since the change in management in November 2018. “PIA is also going to start flights on the Islamabad-Muscat route on April 23. This will be the ninth new route in less than six months.”

Besides, it has stopped and suspended flights on a couple of loss-making routes under the rationalisation programme.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 20th, 2019.


1954858-image-1555703055-357-640x480.jpg

PIA reaches break-even in operating profit | The Express Tribune
Says it has come out of losses at operational level after quite a long time
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tribune.com.pk
 
And it is in less than 6 months of the appointment of the new CEO and also see the airspace has been closed but still PIA is soaring high. That's what I used to say that PIA is naturally profitable...it just needs a capable and honest CEO. Within one year PIA will be making great profits and adding new routes ...and regain the markets and routes lost to other airlines... where are those morons who used to claim it cannot become profitable ever?
PIA is the father of Emirates and many other airlines
@Indus Pakistan
 
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KARACHI: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has claimed that it has come out of losses at the operational level after quite a long time as its revenues slightly exceeded the operating cost in the quarter ended March 31, 2019.

“PIA has achieved breakeven at the operational level,” Adviser to PIA CEO Air Vice Marshal Noor Abbas told The Express Tribune. “It, however, may take three to four years to report a net profit.”

The state-owned airline’s revenue surged to an average of Rs8-8.5 billion a month in the January-March 2019 quarter compared to around Rs7 billion a month in the same period of last year. “The operating cost was slightly lower than the monthly revenue or was almost equal,” he said.

18 new planes, new routes planned for PIA

The adviser said a notable improvement in financial management came after the seat occupancy rate per flight increased to around 90% in the period under review compared to less than 70% in the corresponding period of previous year.

Moreover, the addition of four planes to the operational fleet after repair, which took more than a year, reduction in the number of employees, drastic reduction in the ticket reservation cost, increased load factor of cargo and increase in the number of flights on profit-making routes helped achieve these results.

“Such improvement in operations came following the change of management in November 2018 when Air Marshal Arshad Malik took charge as CEO of the airline,” he said. “PIA is doing well under the five-year business plan, which got approval of the cabinet very recently.”

He revealed that PIA had been saving roughly Rs1 billion a month since it acquired the new ticket reservation software from Turkey-based firm Hitit in October 2018. “The new reservation software is costing half of what PIA was paying to the US-based firm Saber.”

“The saving is playing a major role in turning around the airline,” he said.

Grounded planes return to air

The adviser said seven aircraft had been grounded for repair and maintenance at the time the new management took over the airline. Some of them had remained in the hangar for over a year due to lack of finances. “We have now put four of them in the operational fleet,” Abbas said.

PIA business plan to be ready by March

It became possible after the government extended sovereign guarantees for commercial loans worth Rs5.6 billion for repair and maintenance in February 2019.

“Another two grounded aircraft – Boing 777 AP-BHV and A-320 AP-BLV – will start flying by mid-May,” he said. “The required parts have arrived from original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) in the US and Europe.”

Cargo


load improves
He said the cargo load factor had also increased to over 70% these days compared to less than 50% about six months ago. “Accordingly, the share of revenue from cargo operations has increased to 7-8% in the total revenue compared to around 5% earlier,” he said.

New planes

He said the management had planned to increase the fleet to around 45 aircraft under the five-year business plan from 32 at present. “First of the new aircraft is expected to be acquired in the current calendar year.”

He, however, said it had not yet been decided whether the first aircraft would be narrow or wide-body plane. However, 60% of the 13 new aircraft would be narrow-body and the remaining would be wide-body.

HR rationalisation

He said the state-owned airline had started the process of human resources rationalisation. “We need to cut human resource by 25-30%. We may do so in the next two to three months. The rationalisation drive kicked off in January,” he said.

There are around 13,000 regular employees and another 3,000 outsourced employees of PIA.

He added the impact of HR rationalisation would not be at the mass level as 500-600 employees were leaving the organisation themselves every year including around 400 who were reaching the retirement age.

Routes rationalisation

He said PIA had increased the number of flights and started flying on around eight new international routes, mostly in the Middle East, since the change in management in November 2018. “PIA is also going to start flights on the Islamabad-Muscat route on April 23. This will be the ninth new route in less than six months.”

Besides, it has stopped and suspended flights on a couple of loss-making routes under the rationalisation programme.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1954858/2-pia-reaches-break-even-operating-profit/
I still remember when PM Imran Khan was in UAE and said that once we rented our planes to emirates now we are in losses, but we will rise again. After the reshuffle in cabinet i was disappointed, I was kind of losing hope but then I realize that we have PM who never lost hope and all his life he just kept fighting and we need to stand with him and he will change things and now in today's paper i read that government is slowly moving towards the presidential system and this is our last hope. Let's pray and stand with kaaptan
 
PIA turns profitable during every hajj season, lets see if PIA ends its finencial year on +ve note.
 
Karachi could have been a transit hub with its location towards SE Asia and Mid-East. PIA should have become Emirates rather than helping Dubai do it.
 

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