• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

SIA will also be running out of cash soon

SIA will be looking forward to deploy more planes to fly in more CECAs.
Their lucrative market in North Asia is now kaput. China, Korea and Japan are not opening up anytime soon. Aussie neither.

Traditionally they are not strong in Europe & US. So they sitting burning cash and losing market share while US and other rivals are thriving under domestic travel.
 
SIA will be looking forward to deploy more planes to fly in more CECAs.
Their lucrative market in North Asia is now kaput. China, Korea and Japan are not opening up anytime soon. Aussie neither.

Traditionally they are not strong in Europe & US. So they sitting burning cash and losing market share while US and other rivals are thriving under domestic travel.

That doesn't make sense. If CECA ah nehs want to fly here, they can fly their own airlines. Why the need for SIA?
 
SIA is cash rich,,,better hold on to your SIA shares,,,huat ah...

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

Thursday, 08 Jul 2021 07:02 PM MYT

Having culled older planes and cut 20 per cent of staff last year, Singapore Airlines is under less immediate pressure for more downsizing. — AFP pic
Having culled older planes and cut 20 per cent of staff last year, Singapore Airlines is under less immediate pressure for more downsizing. — AFP pic

Follow us on Instagram and subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

SINGAPORE, July 8 — Singapore Airlines, flush with US$16 billion (S$21.63 billion) raised since the start of the pandemic thanks to help from a state investor, is in a position of dominance among its Southeast 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.


ADVERTISING

“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. Chief executive officer (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 nine per cent of rights sold in SIA’s recent S$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 S$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 S$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$2.4 billion) for 2021.
SIA’s financial cushioning makes it harder to push back on contracts with manufacturers and lessors. Temasek supports fleet modernisation.
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,” Wilson said. “The extent to which that subsequently constrains them, time will tell.” — TODAY
 
Airline industry is dead for this year 2021 and next year 2022.
 
Temasek not complying with ESG because it has to keep SIA afloat.

Temasek defends green goals as it backs Singapore Airlines, Sembcorp Marine​

Temasek has pledged to halve the net carbon emissions of its portfolio compared with 2010 levels by 2030, and reach net-zero by 2050.


Temasek has pledged to halve the net carbon emissions of its portfolio compared with 2010 levels by 2030, and reach net-zero by 2050.

July 22, 2021


SINGAPORE (BLOOMBERG) - It might seem contradictory to invest in carbon-emitting polluters while pledging to be an eco-trailblazer, but that's exactly what Singapore's investment company, Temasek, is attempting to do.
As one of the world's largest institutional investors, its US$282 billion (S$385 billion) portfolio is replete with businesses that contribute to global warming - from Singapore Airlines to Sembcorp Marine, a supplier of offshore rigs.
While peers like Norway's sovereign wealth fund have used hard targets and the sale of assets to improve their green credentials, Temasek is taking a different path.
"We never said we will not invest in an emitter of carbon - as long as this emitter is on a journey, a path and we can be helpful in terms of how we can shift them," said Mr Nagi Hamiyeh, Temasek International's joint head of investments.
Temasek's approach is emblematic of the delicate dance many global investors face, especially those laden with legacy assets that once belonged to the state.
The pressure of maintaining returns without causing social upheaval and job losses while pledging to be green can be hard to reconcile, especially in a city-state where refined fuels and chemicals accounted for almost a quarter of merchandise trade in 2019.

Temasek has pledged to halve the net carbon emissions of its portfolio compared with 2010 levels by 2030, and reach net-zero by 2050. It's ramped up the amount of money it allocates to impact investment and environmental, social and governance funds.
In April, it teamed up with BlackRock to form Decarbonization Partners, aiming for a US$1 billion initial fund to back start-ups that can cut the world's reliance on fossil fuels. It's also backed an Indian renewable energy investment vehicle and a carbon trading platform.
But Temasek remains the biggest investor in two of the world's biggest oil rig builders - Keppel Corp and Sembcorp Marine.
Last month, its unit signed an agreement to help Keppel sell its built and uncompleted rigs, some of which could be used to mine fossil fuels.

And in February, its wholly owned subsidiary Heliconia Capital Management helped fund a US$600 million rescue package for the country's biggest shipper, known as Pacific International Lines. Other holdings include Pavilion Energy and PSA International, a port service company.
The firm has also pumped billions of dollars into Singapore Airlines, a major global carrier.
Mr Hamiyeh said that unlike peers, the airline has not cancelled new aircraft purchases, allowing it to upgrade to models that emit less carbon. The carrier has pledged to hit net zero by 2050.
The emissions attributable to Temasek's portfolio jumped 36 per cent to 30 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent this year, from 22 million tonnes in 2011, according to the investor's annual report.
Some of these energy and transportation stocks have been a drag on performance for Temasek, which last week reported a 10-year annualised gain of 7 per cent. Over the same period, Singapore Airlines' annual decline was 2.1 per cent, while Sembcorp Marine's was 25 per cent and Keppel's 3.2 per cent.
In the meantime, Temasek is influencing how corporations around the world think and invest in environmental sustainability.
Its staff participate in public forums, it's a member of Singapore's Green Finance Working Group and it takes part in dialogues with bodies like the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board.
Temasek's narrative is shared by many peers, particularly in countries that produce fossil fuels or are still heavily reliant on coal or natural gas as power sources.
Australia's UniSuper Management is the biggest shareholder of gas distributor APA Group even while it has more than 12 per cent of its US$75 billion in assets in sustainable investments.
Canada's US$400 billion national pension fund still holds large stakes in energy stocks like Canadian Natural Resources.
In Temasek's view, rather than palming off a polluting asset to a third party or shutting it down, it's better to fund their adaptation.
"We much prefer to work with our investee companies: Can you reduce your emissions? Can you replace your emissions with a different technology," Ms Neo Gim Huay, Temasek International's climate change strategy managing director, told reporters last week. "It is a global problem and we prefer not to pass the problem to someone else."

Change Within​

The approach is lauded by some investors who argue that change from within can be more effective than unloading assets.
Mr Christoph Klein, founder and managing partner at ESG Portfolio Management - a Frankfurt-based asset manager with funds targeting sustainable outcomes - uses the example of a hypothetical renewable energy investment in Norway.
"You'd make a much bigger difference helping an Indian coal company to change its energy mix and to significantly reduce emissions," he said. "But there's a risk that some investors can say they're helping a coal company transition without really pushing hard for change."
Critics say carbon abatement is almost never as good as avoiding the emission in the first place.
If Keppel's uncompleted rigs were off the market, they could not be used to pump oil or gas and the price of offshore exploration may increase. And if a lack of capital forced Singapore Airlines to slash services, then higher prices would potentially curb travel.
"Temasek should no longer be supporting any sector that's strongly connected to or supports fossil-fuel burning and deforestation," said Ms Hindun Mulaika, a climate and energy campaign manager for Greenpeace in Indonesia. "Considering carbon offset options without pushing hard to divest from highly polluting sectors is just not enough."
 

Singapore Airlines uses up last $600m of $8.8b from 2020 rights issue​

SIA said the use of proceeds for the whole amount raised in the rights issue is in accordance with the intended use of proceeds.


SIA said the use of proceeds for the whole amount raised in the rights issue is in accordance with the intended use of proceeds.
ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI
Uma Devi

SEP 17, 2021

SINGAPORE (THE BUSINESS TIMES) - Singapore Airlines (SIA) has exhausted the $8.8 billion in gross proceeds raised from its rights issue in June last year, with the last $600 million having been used for aircraft and aircraft-related payments between July 1 and Sept 1.
But the net proceeds of $6.2 billion from the issuance of additional mandatory convertible bonds in June this year had not been utilised, the flag carrier said on Thursday (Sept 16).
SIA said in a filing to the Singapore Exchange that it has also raised $21.6 billion in fresh liquidity since April 1 last year. The group added that, in addition to the cash on hand, it continues to retain access to $2.1 billion of committed lines of credit that are currently undrawn.
As far as the 2020 rights issue goes, SIA spent the proceeds of $8.8 billion between June 8 last year and Sept 1 this year. SIA had used $2 billion of the proceeds for the repayment of the bridge loan from DBS Bank, which was set up in April last year to provide the liquidity required by SIA for the completion of the rights issue last year.
Other uses of the proceeds included $2.2 billion for operating expenses during the period, $1.4 billion for ticket refunds, $1.4 billion for aircraft and aircraft-related payments, as well as $1.8 billion for debt service.
SIA said the use of proceeds for the whole amount raised in the rights issue is in accordance with the intended use of proceeds.

The company added that it will remain prudent and proactive in managing its liquidity as international air travel continues to be affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.
While international air travel continues to be affected by the pandemic, the company will remain prudent.
OCBC Bank credit research analyst Ezien Hoo said given that the airline has some capital which remains unused - $6.2 billion from additional mandatory convertible bonds in June this year - it is unlikely to seek further funding in the near future.
“If need be, SIA still has unencumbered aircraft assets that can be used as collateral and for sales and leaseback transactions, which it can tap for liquidity, although if these methods are used it also means less asset coverage from the perspective of unsecured bondholders,” he noted.
Mr Hoo said that SIA is in a good position to weather the short term. But medium-term recovery is very much dependent on resumption of international air travel, which continues to lag in the Asia-Pacific region - the airline’s key market.
“We observe a continued lack of coordination in the Asia-Pacific region towards reopening. For example, lack of discussion by governments over vaccine certificates, how eventual intra-region travel may look like or standardised safety protocols at airports and borders. All these need to happen for airlines to get back on track to profitability,” he added.
SIA shares closed on Friday at $4.83, down nine cents or 1.8 per cent.

Additional reporting by Choo Yun Ting
 
If they could sell NOL to ang mohs and Chartered Semiconductor to Arabs, they can jolly well sell SIA to someone. :rolleyes:

Stop trying to bail out a shitty GLC airline, which is erroneously held up as a symbol of national pride. :roflmao:
 
SIA will always be underwritten by the Govt (via their access to sovereign wealth funds). They effectively have bottomless stacks of cash and will never declare bankruptcy no matter how tough their financial position.
 
Quote: "SIA has a healthy cash kitty and can tap on additional sources of funding if need be."

SIA can depend on Temasek who will continue to use citizens' reserves to keep SIA on life support.

Singapore Airlines Has Exhausted its Remaining $600 Million from the 2020 Rights Issue: Should Investors Worry?​


Royston Yang
Wed, 22 September 2021,


View from Airplane Seat

View from Airplane Seat
Singapore Airlines Limited (SGX: C6L), or SIA, recently released an update on the usage of the monies raised from last year’s massive rights issue.
Of the S$8.8 billion raised from the rights exercise, the group announced that the remaining S$600 million has been used up on aircraft and aircraft-related payments for its fiscal 2022 second quarter.
The money raised was spent within 18 months on various aspects including the paying down of various loans (S$3.8 billion), operating expenses (S$2.2 billion), and ticket refunds (S$1.4 billion).

Recall that this huge sum was raised by SIA back then to tide it through one of the worst periods in the history of the airline.
Fast forward to today, and the situation hasn’t changed significantly.
Borders remain shut for most countries as the COVID-19 delta variant is still spreading like wildfire across the world.
The situation begs the question.
Should investors be concerned that SIA has utilised all the money it had raised?
Could there be another cash call coming?

Alternative sources of funding

At the moment, Singapore’s sole airline has sufficient backup plans.
Just three months ago, it completed the issuance of additional mandatory convertible bonds (MCBs) that helped to raise an additional S$6.2 billion in cash.
These funds have yet to be utilised and the group also has access to S$2.1 billion of committed lines of credit that can be tapped at a moment’s notice.
The MCBs helped to boost SIA’s total cash and bank balance as of 30 June 2021 to S$13.6 billion, a fairly substantial sum that should help to tide the airline over for many more months.
A quick check showed that SIA had managed to reduce its cash burn rate to between S$100 million to S$150 million per month, far below the S$350 million per month at the onset of the pandemic.
As it stands, the stash of cash and lines of credit should provide a sufficient buffer to the airline that can last for years if need be.

An improvement in financial and operating metrics

Meanwhile, SIA’s financial and operating metrics have improved.
For its fiscal 2022 first quarter ended 30 June 2021, total revenue jumped by 52.2% year on year from last year’s low to S$1.3 billion in the latest reporting quarter.
Although the airline chalked up an operating loss of S$274 million, this reported figure was nearly three-quarters lower than the S$1 billion loss incurred in the same period last year.
Net loss stood at S$409 million, significantly lower than the prior year’s S$1.1 billion.
There are signs that last year was the nadir for the group.
The August 2021 operating numbers should also give investors hope.
Passengers carried nearly quadrupled year on year from 39,800 to 155,400, while its Singapore Airlines cargo division saw its capacity climb by 46% year on year and freight tonnage surge by 56.2% year on year.

VTLs offer a reprieve

The numbers could see further improvement from this month onwards as the government has successfully rolled out its vaccinated travel lane (VTL) arrangement.
The first two countries to be included in the VTL arrangement are Germany and Brunei.
The requirements are fairly onerous and will add to passengers’ total costs, but flights with more than 900 passengers have successfully arrived in Singapore earlier this month.
Only one traveller among the hundreds has tested positive thus far, lending confidence that the VTL arrangement works and that this can be a viable way forward for borders to slowly reopen.
Transport Minister S Iswaran also sounded a note of optimism by stating that “the system is working and we are gaining confidence with it”.
Several countries and regions have expressed interest in the VTL after witnessing its initial success.
Singapore is hopeful that VTLs can be expanded to other countries in the coming weeks or months.
It’s still early days, though, and the minister was unable to provide a concrete timeline for Singapore’s border reopening plans due to the dynamic nature of the pandemic.
SIA should benefit from the success of the VTL as they offer a welcome reprieve from the challenging conditions the airline had faced thus far.

Get Smart: Not as dire as expected

The situation isn’t as bad as the headlines make them out to be.
SIA has a healthy cash kitty and can tap on additional sources of funding if need be.
The company’s cargo division is enjoying healthy utilisation while passenger numbers have also been creeping up.
Finally, VTLs offer a glimmer of hope that borders can be reopened, albeit on a limited scale.
Investors will have to be patient, though. We are still in the early days of recovery.
 
Don't be misled by the article, after this 600m, there're still plenty much more cash that it can tap on.
SQ as of now they're already not so much in the red, probably they'll even have profit by the 4Q.. Passengers load have been picking up lately n many passengers use Changi Airport as the transit point..
SQ is vital to SG's survival as it put food on the table for many families here in SG. Don't underestimate the importance of the airline!
 
SIA burning more than $1 billion a year.

Singapore Airlines aims to raise up to $1 billion in US bond deal: Sources​

md_SIA_11012022.jpg

The airline has mandated banks to work on the transaction and will start briefings with investors about the deal on Jan 11, 2022. PHOTO: ST FILE

Jan 11, 2022

SYDNEY (REUTERS) - Singapore Airlines (SIA) is aiming to raise US$500 million to US$750 million (S$677 million to S$1 billion) in a US dollar bond deal, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
The sources could not be named as the information was not yet made public.
SIA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The airline has mandated banks to work on the transaction and will start briefings with investors about the deal on Tuesday (Jan 11), a term sheet seen by Reuters showed.
Citigroup and DBS Bank are leading the transaction, with BNP Paribas and Standard Chartered Bank as book runners, the term sheet showed.
The deal is classified as Reg S, which means the bonds can be purchased only by investors outside the United States.
 
Just print money lah ! CCPee is already doing it to boost birth-rate. Dictators have the privilege to do the unthinkable.

 
$500m - $750m is small $ for SQ... It'll be finished within a year...
 
Financial considerations aside, this is one company most responsible for importing covid here and also for the ruthless way the PAP goes about in coercing people to vaccinate.
How may lives and human suffering to save one company?
 
Financial considerations aside, this is one company most responsible for importing covid here and also for the ruthless way the PAP goes about in coercing people to vaccinate.
How may lives and human suffering to save one company?
Look @The bigger picture, SG don't have domestic mkt big enough to support the airline, hotels, restaurants etc.... How many people will be jobless if all these shut down? If no workers fly in to SG, who is gonna build all the BTOs, build your MRT track, cut your grass, prune your trees etc..
Living with covid is the only way to go fwd, there's no way you can wipe out this virus completely.
 
SIA burning more than $1 billion a year.

Singapore Airlines aims to raise up to $1 billion in US bond deal: Sources​

md_SIA_11012022.jpg

The airline has mandated banks to work on the transaction and will start briefings with investors about the deal on Jan 11, 2022. PHOTO: ST FILE

Jan 11, 2022

SYDNEY (REUTERS) - Singapore Airlines (SIA) is aiming to raise US$500 million to US$750 million (S$677 million to S$1 billion) in a US dollar bond deal, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
The sources could not be named as the information was not yet made public.
SIA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The airline has mandated banks to work on the transaction and will start briefings with investors about the deal on Tuesday (Jan 11), a term sheet seen by Reuters showed.
Citigroup and DBS Bank are leading the transaction, with BNP Paribas and Standard Chartered Bank as book runners, the term sheet showed.
The deal is classified as Reg S, which means the bonds can be purchased only by investors outside the United States.
Actually airline should bend together and sue SIA for using tax payers money to dominate regional competition.
 
Looks like even the VTLs (anti-competitive, but 'conflict of interest' is non-existent in Sinkieland) are not doing much to help SIA, eh? :wink:
 
Back
Top