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SIA will also be running out of cash soon

What is 4.27 billion?

The dowager has cumulatively lost multiples of that over the years. That is why it is important to teach sons to cut loose women who endlessly want more money.


Not her fault

Dont blame her or her hubby or the fucking maggots maggotess in white

BLAME YOURSELF AND THOSE LIKE YOU FOR VOTING AND VOTING TO PUT THOSE MAGGOTS IN POWER
AND MAGGOTS BRINGING IN COCKROACHES FROM INDIA TO REPLACE YOUR VOTES TO STAY IN POWER

LANGJIAO TO THOSE THAT VOTED FOR THE FUCKING PAP

iu
 
SIA already bankrupt and collapsed. Only you stupid porlumpars sinkies prop it up by your desires to travel.
 
Agree SG will collapse firse before they allow SIA to go belly up. That is the problem with egos. They don't know when to stop
So many millions sheep is offering cotton to King dynasty.
How can dynasty owned SIA collapse.
 
It would be many, many times cheaper to shut down SIA and re-start SIA after the pandemic is over.

It costs $50 - $200m to start a small airline. With the $3 billion-plus that had already been pumped into SIA and another $6 billion more needed, Temasek can halved that ($5 billion) and restart a massive airline business from scratch.

Even Umbrage Ng has not lost so much money.

Bad decisions, patriotism, ego (not admitting wrong), not losing face is costing Singapore citizens $10 billion-plus.

Fully agree !!!
Just keep the Aircraft Engineer to service the planes
Keep Maintenance Staff for the Airport.
Each department only remain 1 Manager + 1 Office Executive (Accounts/HR/PR)
The rest all take no-pay leave until pandemic is over
No point feeding Chairman/CEO/VP/Manager & Fat Cats for nothing.
Re-hire when Covid is over
 
SIA is f**ked. Short of $2.44 billion. Rights issue would be a disaster if not for sugar daddy Temasek doing national service and supporting SIA.

Singapore Airlines' $6.2 billion rights issue undersubscribed​

Shares of SIA rose 1.2 per cent to close at S$5.05 on June 18, 2021, before it announced the results of the rights issue.


Shares of SIA rose 1.2 per cent to close at S$5.05 on June 18, 2021, before it announced the results of the rights issue.ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI

Jun 18, 2021

SINGAPORE (THE BUSINESS TIMES) - Temasek Holdings will again take up the lion's share of Singapore Airlines' (SIA) mandatory convertible bonds (MCBs), with the second tranche being undersubscribed.
The flag carrier received valid acceptances and excess applications for $3.76 billion in principal amount of the rights MCBs, representing just 60.6 per cent of the $6.2 billion available under the rights issue.
This included $3.43 billion taken up by SIA controlling shareholder Temasek and its wholly-owned subsidiary Napier Investments under their pro-rata entitlement to the MCBs in the rights issue. That made up slightly more than half of the total principal amount available.
The balance $2.44 billion that was unsubscribed, representing 39.4 per cent of the total amount of rights MCBs, will also be mopped up by a Temasek unit.
The newly issued MCBs will be listed on the Singapore Exchange on or about June 25, and trading is expected to begin at 9am on the same day.
SIA's board of directors on Friday (June 18) thanked shareholders for their support for the company by participating in the rights issue.


Earlier this month, the airline group said it expects the additional $6.2 billion raised from these MCBs to last it till the financial year ending March 2023.
In June 2020, the first tranche of rights MCBs likewise saw few takers, with valid acceptances and excess applications received for only 59.6 per cent of the $3.5 billion in principal amount that was available. That also included $1.94 billion from Temasek's pro-rata entitlement.
Shares of SIA rose 1.2 per cent to close at $5.05 on Friday, before it announced the results of the rights issue.
 
The sensible decision is to shut down an airline, not keep it on life support for a nationalistic reason. No sentimentality.

Indonesia to decide whether to shut down or refinance national airline Garuda​

Garuda struggled to make profits even before the Covid-19 pandemic hit.


Garuda struggled to make profits even before the Covid-19 pandemic hit.PHOTO: EPA-EFE
wahyudisoeriaatmadja.png

Wahyudi Soeriaatmadja
Indonesia Correspondent

JUN 18, 2021


JAKARTA - South-east Asia's largest economy is mulling over whether to shut down or refinance its national airline, Garuda Indonesia, amid debates widely seen to represent two camps: those who are sentimental and those who are focused on the bottom line.
Garuda struggled to make profits even before the Covid-19 pandemic hit.
The state-owned enterprise ministry recently came up with four options - the first three keep the 72-year-old airline aloft and the fourth sees it cease operations.
To keep Garuda flying despite a revenue slump and huge maturing debts, the government must either inject cash; announce a debt standstill, followed by a restructuring; or go for a debt revamp while creating an airline that would take over Garuda's routes, according to the first three proposed solutions.
Global travel was devastated by the pandemic, severely affecting even major players such as Singapore Airlines and Emirates, flag carrier of the United Arab Emirates.
Garuda's revenue probably shrank to US$1.67 billion (S$2.24 billion) last year, from US$4.57 billion in the previous year, according to a research note by Jakarta-based equity brokerage Ciptadana Sekuritas Asia.

The airline is yet to release its full 2020 financial results. On Thursday (June 17), it missed a repayment on a US$500 million Islamic debt.
A recent viral recording of Garuda chief executive officer Irfan Setiaputra's address to staff, whose content was later confirmed by management, revealed that it planned to cut its fleet by 50 per cent, retrench staff and sell assets.
"The fact is our debt reached 70 trillion rupiah (S$6.5 billion) and every month it grew by more than a trillion rupiah," he was heard saying in the recording.
In a June 10 filing to the Indonesia Stock Exchange, he reported that Garuda returned two Boeing 737-800NG planes to a lessor and is in discussions with other companies to restructure leasing terms. It currently operates 142 aircraft.

The airline had gone through a debt revamp in 2006 to help it turn profitable. But a mark-up culture in procurement and poor governance, among other factors, continued to plague Garuda even as it battled low-cost rivals.
Last year, former CEO Emirsyah Satar was sentenced to an eight-year jail term for receiving bribes for his support in securing contracts to procure Bombardier, Airbus and ATR aircraft as well as Rolls-Royce engines.
Separately, British fraud investigators were investigating Bombardier over contracts related to Garuda, according to the Serious Fraud Office.
"Frankly, this is a long-term problem and deep-rooted. We could just let the private sector do the flying, or invite foreign operators, say Emirates," said a senior government official during a recent discussion with business editors in Jakarta.
"This way, we wouldn't burden the taxpayers and the flying public," he added.

But MPs from the ruling and opposition parties have other views. They have urged the government to save Garuda, with some including Mr Deddy Yevri Sitorus of the ruling Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), calling it the "epicentre of Indonesia's aviation industry".
They noted that the airline not only provided jobs but also generated employment in related sectors such as ground handling at airports and courier.
Mr Herman Khaeron, a member of a parliamentary committee overseeing state-owned enterprises and investments, said the majority in the committee are in favour of keeping Garuda flying since it is an asset which the nation takes pride in.
"We have held a meeting with the state-owned enterprise minister to act fast, allow Garuda to take corporate actions that will lift its operating pressures," Mr Herman, a member of the opposition Democratic party, told The Straits Times on Thursday.
He shares Mr Deddy's call for the government to prepare financial and organisational restructuring for Garuda so that it can emerge stronger after the pandemic.


Other airlines also struggling​

Emirates Group, which recently booked its first loss in decades due to border curbs across the globe, received 11.3 billion dirhams (S$4.1 billion) in state support from Dubai this month.
The airline, whose focus has been on inter-continental travel, saw revenue in the financial year that ended March 31 drop more than 60 per cent to 35.6 billion dirhams.
Cathay Pacific Airways suffered a record loss of about HK$21.7 billion (S$3.8 billion) last year, due to the pandemic and social unrest that preceded it in Hong Kong.
Its workforce has declined to about three-quarters of that before the pandemic. Last October, it cut 5,900 staff, 600 of whom were pilots.
The airline has grounded most of its fleet, reduced pay and put many on unpaid leave.
Singapore Airlines (SIA) has raised $15.4 billion, of which $8.8 billion was from selling rights shares, since April last year, and trimmed about a fifth of its employees, according to Bloomberg.
The SIA Group had its worst annual loss - $4.3 billion - in the financial year ended March 31, as Covid-19 decimated global travel.
Latam Airlines Group, the largest carrier in Latin America, filed for bankruptcy protection in May last year because of the pandemic. It is currently evaluating a court-supervised exit plan, which includes proposing acquisition offers to creditors.
The Santiago-based airline reported a US$4.6 billion (S$6.2 billion) loss last year, compared with a profit of US$196 million in 2019.
 
Emirates is a better-ranked airline than SIA.

Emirates posts $7.3 billion full-year loss, its first in 3 decades, as Covid-19 slams travel​

Emirates airline slumped to a 22.1 billion dirhams loss in the financial year ended March.


Emirates airline slumped to a 22.1 billion dirhams loss in the financial year ended March.PHOTO: REUTERS

JUN 15, 2021


DUBAI (BLOOMBERG, AFP) - Emirates airline on Tuesday (June 15) posted a 20.28 billion dirham (S$7.3 billion) full-year loss, its first in more than three decades, after the Covid-19 pandemic upended demand for air travel.
The airline, one of the world's largest before the pandemic, saw revenue plunge 66.4 per cent to 30.9 billion dirham as passenger traffic plummeted 88.3 per cent to just 6.5 million.
The airline group slumped to a 22.1 billion dirhams loss in the financial year ended March. Emirates Group reduced its total workforce by 31 per cent to 75,145 employees.
The state-owned company received a capital injection of 11.3 billion dirhams from its owner, the government of Dubai. Its dnata (Dubai National Air Travel Agency) unit tapped industry support programmes and availed relief of nearly 800 million dirhams, its chairman, Sheikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, said.
Emirates has been hit especially hard by the pandemic, with widespread border curbs making it impossible for people to make the inter-continental journeys in which it specialises.
The Gulf carrier responded by grounding most of its fleet of Airbus A380 superjumbos, while its Boeing 777s are struggling with lower passenger loads and mainly transporting cargo.
 
My opinion is SIA is only valued at 50cents.
Like any wise investor, temasick and GICK should cut loss and await better times or else they are derelict in their fiduciary duties.
Its criminal behaviour when there is no clear ending of the pandemic nor any concrete evidence SIA is critical for Sg survival when other airlines can still do the job. Egos and emotional reactions are what brings nations down.
 
Airlines without a big domestic market are f**ked: SIA, the Middle Eastern airlines (Emirates, Qatar).
Temasek and investors should have sold SIA and bought Qantas shares.

One airline set to emerge from Covid-19 stronger than ever​

While airlines globally are facing massive losses, Qantas has become one of the most financially secure carriers anywhere in the world.


While airlines globally are facing massive losses, Qantas has become one of the most financially secure carriers anywhere in the world.

Jun 24, 2021

SYDNEY (BLOOMBERG) - It's the final Wednesday of January 2020, the coronavirus has yet to claim anyone outside of China, and Qantas Airways CEO Alan Joyce is all smiles and handshakes. He's flown almost two hours north from Sydney to the mining town of Toowoomba to open a pilot academy. In the sweltering heat of the open hangar, he tellsthe crowd that graduates will one day captain the giant Airbus A380s or Boeing Dreamliners that anchor the iconic Australian airline's long-haul network.
There's little mention of the virus that weeks later would lay waste to global aviation. Yet on the plane trip back to Qantas's headquarters that afternoon, Mr Joyce is already focusing on the looming battle. In an interview from his usual seat - 1A - he says he'll do whatever it takes to come out of the pandemic on top.
"It's survival of the fittest," he predicts.
That was an early glimpse of the determined, even ruthless, approach that has seen Qantas not just survive the biggest crisis in aviation history, but become almost unassailable in its home market.
While losses at airlines globally from Covid-19 are set to surpass US$174 billion (S$234 billion) by the end of 2021 - wiping out half a decade of profits - Qantas has become one of the most financially secure carriers anywhere in the world. Its stock has surged 120 per cent from a March 2020 low - almost double the return of the Bloomberg World Airlines Index - and its market value has swollen to A$8.9 billion (S$9.1 billion). Qantas says net debt has peaked and it's on track to deliver an underlying profit for the year ending this month.
The 100-year-old carrier's market position, Mr Joyce declared on May 20, "is stronger than it has ever been."

Qantas' muscular recovery from a crisis that was terminal for many of its peers is a tale of commercial opportunism and political guile. Australia's improbable feat of almost eliminating Covid-19, not to mention subsidies for fliers, created a haven for air travel that Mr Joyce has exploited to its fullest.
His springboard was Australia's shutdown of its international borders in March last year. The government didn't just stop visitors coming in - it also barred citizens from leaving. So within months, travel-loving Australians who'd normally jet off to Aspen or the Mediterranean started emptying their wallets at home in a domestic vacation bonanza.
Qantas, by far Australia's largest airline, was one of the biggest beneficiaries. The boost was turbo-charged this year when the government started subsidizing 800,000 half-priced airfares to support tourism. Air travel in Australia has become so popular that Mr Joyce said in May demand was about to surpass even pre-Covid levels.
"I don't see any way Qantas won't come out of this very strongly," Ian Chitterer, a vice president at Moody's Investors Service in Sydney, said in an interview. "You can't imagine the opportunities would have presented themselves to the same degree were it not for the pandemic."

Mr Joyce, 54, hasn't held back. A former flight scheduler himself, he's been busy orchestrating Qantas's biggest network expansion in a decade, adding 45 routes during the pandemic.
The holiday boom has been enabled by an unlikely victory over a virus that has killed almost 3.9 million people in the rest of the world. Australia, which has suffered fewer than 1,000 deaths, only has about 150 active cases and life has largely continued as normal. The country came in third out of 53 nations last month in Bloomberg's Covid Resilience Ranking of the best places to be during the pandemic.
Self-containment isn't the only thing underpinning Qantas's recovery. Australia's vast land mass - more than double that of India - makes flying the only practical way to travel between most major cities. The 26-million-strong population also puts a limit on viable airline competitors.

eb_allan_062421.jpg
Qantas CEO Alan Joyce has been busy orchestrating the airline's biggest network expansion in a decade, adding 45 routes during the pandemic. PHOTO: REUTERS

And Mr Joyce, who has led Qantas since 2008, has been merciless. When Qantas's closest rival Virgin Australia appealed for government help just a few weeks into the crisis, Mr Joyce argued successfully against rewarding "badly managed" companies. Without the kind of aid that propped up carriers across Europe and the US, Virgin collapsed in April last year, riddled with debt after trying in vain to go head-to-head with Qantas.
While Bain Capital rescued Virgin two months later, the buyout firm shrunk the airline's fleet and relaunched it with more modest ambitions. Mr Joyce soon went after Virgin's frequent fliers - the core of any airline - with an offer to fast-track their loyalty status with a switch to Qantas.
Those efforts are bearing fruit. Qantas's market share touched 74 per cent in December and was 69 per cent in March, up from 61 per cent before the pandemic, the competition regulator says. That's a degree of dominance unthinkable in the US, where American Airlines Group leads with a 20 per cent market share, according to March data from the Department of Transportation.
To be sure, Covid-19 didn't bypass Qantas. The airline estimates the pandemic has cost it A$16 billion in lost revenue, and its pretax loss for the year ending June will be more than A$2 billion, a figure that includes plane writedowns and redundancy costs. Mr Joyce has had to deploy the bare-bones budgeting skills he later honed as the head of Jetstar. He's cutting 8,500 jobs from Qantas and carving out AUS$15 billion in costs.
In a statement, Qantas said: "We've been clear that we have to make fundamental changes to our business in order to survive. Our focus has to be making sure we're in a position to repair and recover."
Teri O'Toole, federal secretary of the Flight Attendant's Association of Australia International, says Qantas is taking advantage of the crisis to part with some of its best-paid cabin crew and reduce their influence on salary negotiations. "They're using the pandemic," said Mr O'Toole, who's also a Qantas cabin-crew member. "They're telling employees how bad it is, but they're telling the market they're making money."
In response, Qantas said in its statement that revenue losses have been so large that "difficult decisions" have been necessary. "Job losses have unfortunately been part of that," it said.
Australia's Transport Workers' Union National Secretary Michael Kaine says state funding to Qantas should be conditional on keeping its workers. Most of the A$1.2 billion in government aid given to the airline in 2020 was designed to keep staff in their jobs, filings show.
"Mr Joyce seems to have quite a capacity to be able to move this current federal government wherever he wants them to go," Mr Kaine said in an interview. "He's persuasive."
Mr Joyce's biggest test may come from the Australian policy that Qantas has so benefited from. While the US and parts of Europe are reopening to foreign travel, Australia is in no hurry. The government says borders are likely to stay shut until the middle of 2022, with public support for the closure still high and vaccination rates slower than elsewhere. International business generated about a third of group income before Covid-19. Just before the pandemic, Qantas was poised to push ahead with Project Sunrise - the first non-stop services linking Sydney with New York and London. That's now on ice.
To get back on track, Qantas set out a three-year plan last June that included raising A$1.4 billion from institutional investors and grounding its entire fleet of 12 A380 superjumbos for at least three years. The airline expects its cost-cutting program to deliver A$1 billion in annual savings from June 2023.
The plan suggests Qantas could come out of Covid not only stronger at home, but able to gain market share against international rivals that have become weighed down with debt during the health crisis, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Qantas looks set to "capitalise on the relatively soft competitive landscape," analyst Richard Jones said in a June report.
 
American airlines are better investments than SIA.

United Airlines unveils huge jet order in bet on travel recovery​

United Airlines plans to acquire 200 Boeing aircraft and 70 Airbus jets.


United Airlines plans to acquire 200 Boeing aircraft and 70 Airbus jets.

June 29,2021

NEW YORK (AFP) - United Airlines announced on Tuesday a huge new plane order with Boeing and Airbus in the biggest bet thus far by a major carrier on a travel industry recovery from Covid-19.
The US carrier plans to acquire 270 new planes consisting of 200 Boeing aircraft and 70 Airbus jets. The order would be valued at US$35.4 billion based on the listed price of the jets, although airlines often end up paying much less than the list price.
United executives described the order - the biggest in the airline's history - as a landmark moment symbolising the radically improved outlook for travel due to coronavirus vaccines.
Still, United and other major airlines are expected to report another quarterly loss for the April-June period when they release their earnings reports in July, reflecting the continued drag of a travel crisis that has devastated travel revenue for more than a year.
United's business travel volumes are still down 60 per cent, with international travel off even more, said United chief executive Scott Kirby.
"We're not back to 100 per cent," Mr Kirby said on a conference call with reporters in which he outlined how the company leaders had strategised on its needs early in the pandemic.

"Because we accurately mapped out the trajectory of the crisis in March and April of last year, it's really allowed us to be prepared and make the right short- and long-term decisions," he said.
Company officials were not asked about the so-called Delta virus variant - which is spreading rapidly in many parts of the world - during the hour-long conference call, but the announcement illustrates broad confidence in the industry's prospects even as the pandemic evolves.
The biggest component of the order will be 150 of Boeing's new 737 MAX 10, which is still undergoing tests in a process closely monitored by US regulators. The announcement is a victory for Boeing's jet, which was grounded for 20 months following two deadly crashes.
The other two components are 50 Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 70 Airbus A321neo.

All three models are narrow-body jets, making them well-suited for domestic and shorter-distance trips that have been among the first to see passenger numbers recover from the Covid-19 pandemic.
Both the Airbus model and the next-generation 737 MAX are bigger than earlier versions of the same aircraft, a feature especially beneficial for increasing capacity in New York, San Francisco and other markets where adding more flights is difficult or impossible, United officials said.
United officials made clear during the conference call that they have seen very recent signs of an acceleration in business travel bookings, with firms eager to resume client visits as they see their competitors returning to the skies.

Executives also said they were bullish about international travel, speaking of the summer of 2022 as being a "record breaker" as US consumers make up for lost opportunities during the pandemic to visit Europe and Asia.
The new planes will include enhanced in-flight entertainment options aiming to delight consumers with access to games and thousands of shows and movies. In another step to please consumers, the company plans to upgrade its existing fleet of narrow-body planes to add more compartment space for luggage.
Richard Aboulafia, an aviation expert at Teal Group, said purchases of the A321 and the 737 MAX - both single-aisle planes - make sense for the airline in the current market.
"The domestic markets are coming back pretty fast and fuel prices are coming back fast too," Mr Aboulafia said.
Airlines must make long-term bets to remain competitive, even if current market conditions still present significant problems, Mr Aboulafia said, adding that current low interest rates also encourage making purchases now.
Scott Hamilton of Leeham News, an aviation website, said he was surprised at the size of the order. Boeing likely provided United an appealing discount because the company "has to rebuild its order book" after the MAX crisis, he said.
 
Qn is how and what is themaresick strategy to recover the money that they have pumped into saving SIA?
 
Qn is how and what is themaresick strategy to recover the money that they have pumped into saving SIA?

Why would they need to recover the money? It's not their own money.
 
Only Sinkies' CPF and reserves deployed through Temasek are keeping SIA from bankruptcy.
Temasek going to throw more of Sinkies' CPF and reserves into SIA in the next 12 to 18 months.

Quotes:
"Less than 9 per cent of rights sold in SIA's recent $6.2 billion convertible bond issue went to shareholders other than Temasek, showing the state investor is more patient than others about achieving returns."

But analysts say it could take 12 to 18 months for widespread travel to resume in Asia. "They can survive for two or three years without making any money," CAPA Centre for Aviation chairman Emeritus Peter Harbison said. "But at a certain stage you say, 'is it really worth it? Shouldn't you take tough steps?'"

Cash-rich Singapore Airlines positioned for regional dominance as rivals pull back​

SIA's cash pile is the envy of rivals like Thai Airways and Garuda Indonesia, which have received little government support.


SIA's cash pile is the envy of rivals like Thai Airways and Garuda Indonesia, which have received little government support.

July 8, 2021

SYDNEY (REUTERS) - Singapore Airlines (SIA), flush with US$16 billion (S$21.6 billion) raised since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic thanks to help from a state investor, is in a position of dominance among its South-east Asian rivals as they downsize and restructure.
The crisis threatened the survival of hub carriers that lack domestic markets such as SIA, Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific Airways and Dubai's Emirates. Indeed, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong last year said the government would "spare no effort" to ensure SIA made it through the pandemic.
Its majority shareholder, government-owned investment arm Temasek Holdings underwrote one of the world's biggest airline rescue packages. Thanks to that, SIA's has enough funds to keep going for at least two more years without cuts, and is modernising its fleet to save fuel, reduce maintenance costs and meet environmental goals while other airlines shed aircraft.
"The crisis shows the importance of having a cash-rich state investor as its main backer," said a banker, who was not authorised to speak with media and spoke anonymously.
SIA's cash pile is the envy of rivals like Thai Airways and Garuda Indonesia, which have received little government support. Many of SIA's rivals are trimming fleets to a level that could ultimately weaken their hubs and send more connecting traffic to Singapore.
"Basically what these airlines are trying to do is they are trying to ward off their debtors," said Subhas Menon, director general of the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines.



SIA, meanwhile, is improving its fleet and bolstering its budget carrier, Scoot. In Europe and North America, leisure travel has led a recovery; if that holds true in Asia, budget carriers will be crucial for airlines.
Having culled older planes and cut 20 per cent of staff last year, SIA is under less immediate pressure for more downsizing. CEO Goh Choon Phong in May described last year's job cuts as a "very painful process" and said there were no plans for more.
But analysts say it could take 12 to 18 months for widespread travel to resume in Asia.
"They can survive for two or three years without making any money," CAPA Centre for Aviation chairman Emeritus Peter Harbison said. "But at a certain stage you say, 'is it really worth it? Shouldn't you take tough steps?'"

Less than 9 per cent of rights sold in SIA's recent $6.2 billion convertible bond issue went to shareholders other than Temasek, showing the state investor is more patient than others about achieving returns.

Modern fleet​

SIA deferred $4 billion of spending on new planes over three years after reaching agreements with manufacturers Airbus and Boeing.
But because of large pre-crisis orders, it is still spending $3.7 billion on new aircraft and adding at least 19 planes to its fleet this year, including 13 widebodies, despite little demand.
By contrast, Germany's larger Lufthansa, which earned nearly four times as much revenue annually pre-Covid, has a capital spending budget of about 1.5 billion euros (S$2.39 billion) for 2021.
SIA's financial cushioning makes it harder to push back on contracts with manufacturers and lessors. Temasek supports fleet modernisation.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC​

SIA says it is well capitalised, has no delisting plans

Access to cash, resources means SIA ready to compete when normality returns, says its CEO

Budget advantage​

With travel in a holding pattern and rivals distracted by financial issues, Scoot has been using some of SIA's cash to boost staff training and invest in new software that helps it calculate more profitable fares for connecting flights.
"There has been a lot of investment, which is certainly geared toward a future recovery," Scoot CEO Campbell Wilson said. "Those investments I hope will pay off as time passes."
Thai Airways lost significant market share to budget rivals in the decade before the pandemic, contributing to years of losses, and has yet to formulate a fresh low-cost strategy as part of a restructuring involving US$12.9 billion of debt.
Garuda, Malaysia Airlines and Philippine Airlines are in similar positions, either having completed or about to launch major restructurings. They lost money for years before the pandemic.
"Presumably in shedding their liabilities they will create some unhappy people who were owed money that was never paid," Mr Wilson said. "The extent to which that subsequently constrains them, time will tell."
 
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