컨텐츠 바로가기

04.25 (목)

이슈 불붙는 OTT 시장

Korean airliners bottom line hit hard by loss of travels to Japan, virus outbreak

댓글 첫 댓글을 작성해보세요
주소복사가 완료되었습니다
매일경제

<이미지를 클릭하시면 크게 보실 수 있습니다>


South Korean airliners are crashing down amid hiatus in travel business due to spread of the China-originated novel coronavirus (COVID-19) that can further wreck their bottom line that bore the burn from consumer boycott in visits to Japan.

The country’s largest LCC Jeju Air Co. in its regulatory filing on Tuesday said it incurred an operating loss of 45.06 billion won ($38.2 million) in the quarter ended December, shriveling 159.5 percent from three months ago and reversing from a profit of 5.4 billion won a year earlier.

Its net loss narrowed 44.9 percent on quarter but widened 18.8 percent on year to 16.6 billion won, while sales slid 16.1 percent and 2.5 percent, respectively, to total 309.4 billion won during the period.

For the full 2019, Jeju Air swung to an operating loss of 32.89 billion won due largely to reduced travel demand on short-haul routes amid nationwide consumer boycott against Japanese goods and trips to the country and turbulence in Hong Kong.

It logged a net loss of 34.1 billion won for the year, and sales added 9.9 percent on year to 1.38 trillion won.

National flag carrier Korean Air Lines Co. (KAL) disclosed its operating profit for full 2019 retreated 56.4 percent to 290.9 billion won. Net loss snowballed to 570.8 billion won from 107.4 billion won a year ago, while sales contracted 2.8 percent to 12.3 trillion won.

Another leading budget carrier Jin Air Co. under Korean Air Lines posted an operating loss of 49.15 billion won last year, reversing from a profit of 62.98 billion won in 2018. It also swung to a net loss of 54.24 billion won, with sales down 9.9 percent to 910.16 trillion won.

T’way Air, Korea’s third largest budget name, reversed to an operating loss of 19.23 billion won despite highest-ever revenue of 810.4 trillion won, up 10.7 percent on year.

Others also would done equally poor.

Their outlook is equally murky as the spread of a new deadly epidemic has led to a voluntary cutback or shutdown of services to China, on which domestic carriers rely much of their revenue.

“Markets expected business recovery on renewed hopes for easing in trade tensions between the U.S. and China, but the recent virus scare has made matters worse,” said an industry source.

[ⓒ Maeil Business Newspaper & mk.co.kr, All rights reserved]
기사가 속한 카테고리는 언론사가 분류합니다.
언론사는 한 기사를 두 개 이상의 카테고리로 분류할 수 있습니다.