Qatar Airways makes ‘substantial’ loss as boycott bites

The state-owned airline had made a profit of 1.97 billion Qatari riyals the financial year before

Qatar Airways Chief Executive Officer Akbar al-Baker poses with pilots in the cockpit of an Airbus A350-1000 at the Eurasia Airshow in the Mediterranean resort city of Antalya, Turkey April 25, 2018. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
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Qatar Airways made a “substantial” loss in its last financial year because of a regional dispute that has banned the airline from four Arab countries, its chief executive said on Wednesday without revealing the extent of the losses.

The airline has been blocked from flying to 18 cities in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt since June 2017, when those countries cut ties with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism. Doha denies the charges.

“We have increased our operating costs. We had to also take a hit on revenues so we don’t think that our results for the last financial year will be very good,” chief executive Akbar Al Baker told reporters at the Eurasia Airshow in Antalya, Turkey.

“I don’t want to say the size of the loss but it was substantial.”

Other parts of the business were profitable though that was not enough to make up for the airline loss, Mr Baker said.

Qatar Airways has several subsidiaries including airport ground handling services and catering units.

The airline had warned of the loss for several months.

The state-owned airline will need another eight weeks to finalise its books and make adjustments before it announces its financial results for the year to March 31, Mr Baker said.

Qatar Airways made 1.97 billion Qatari riyals (£388 million) profit in its previous fiscal year.

Neighbouring Saudi Arabia and the UAE were popular routes for Qatar Airways, which has also been banned from the airspace of the four boycotting states.

That has forced the airline to fly longer flights on many routes to the west and south of Qatar which requires more fuel and increases costs.

Qatar Airways has no immediate plans to ask its sole shareholder, the government of Qatar, for a capital injection but may do so if the airspace ban continues and there is pressure on its debt equity ratio, Baker said.

It owns stakes in several airlines including Cathay Pacific and British Airways-parent International Consolidated Airlines Group (IAG).

Mr Baker said that when Qatar hosts the FIFA World Cup in 2022 the airline would have a passenger and cargo network of nearly 250 destinations. It currently flies to more than 150 destinations, according to its website.