Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Why Modi Shouldn’t Have Tom-Tommed Air India’s Brief Flirtation With Profit

One of the few dubious claims Narendra Modi made during his Independence Day speech was about bringing Air India back to profits. “Air India was infamous for incurring losses. My government has succeeded in bringing Air India to a situation of clocking operational profit,” he said.

That should be news to most of us. Not that the airline is losing money, but what it has made is an “operating profit” – that is, a cash profit before setting off other key costs and carry-forward losses. A Business Standard report notes that the airline may have made an operational profit of around Rs 100-110 crore in 2015-16, which at best means that it is not continuing to bleed. But the real numbers are likely to be a fresh loss of Rs 2,636 crore in 2015-16, but down from the massive Rs 5,859 crore in the year before. Even this has been possible only due to the Rs 30,000-crore bailout from government, of which Rs 22,280 crore has already been disbursed.

But this situation of operational profit cannot be presumed to continue. Last year, every private airline was making money hand over fist due to the steep decline in jet fuel prices. Jet Airways, which reported its biggest ever loss in 2014-15, disclosed its biggest-ever profit in 2015-16 of Rs 1,173 crore. SpiceJet, which was skidding badly in 2014-15 when the Marans of Sun TV handed over the company to Ajay Singh, reported a Rs 407-crore profit in 2015-16. So it is hardly a surprise that Air India too managed to keep its head above water.

But with fares remaining competitive, 2016-17 will separate the men from the boys. Jet Airways, which reported its first quarter results last week, saw a sharp 53 percent fall in standalone profits to Rs 103 crore from Rs 221 crore in the corresponding quarter of 2015-16. Naresh Goyal, the Jet Chairman, had this to say: “Due to the intense competitive environment, industry yields were under pressure in Q1 and the trend is expected to continue in Q2.”

It is thus unlikely that Air India is going to shine like a diamond this year, especially when its more competitive peers too are saying the going is tough.

However, the real reason why the Prime Minister should not expect any miracles from Air India in future is simple: it has a faulty public sector DNA, and it simply does not have the right cost structure or business model to be profitable in the long run. It will be sorely tested the minute the cheap fare jamboree ends. Worse, it has the most unionised employee base, thus making it less amenable to cost reductions.

Air India claims a current aircraft-to-employee ratio of 114 while industry leader Indigo’s figures are around 102 per plane. But Air India managed to achieve this only by hiving off labour-intensive functions like ground handling, engineering and MRO (maintenance, repair, operations) services to get here. It chopped off muscle to show less flab.

Air India is now a distant No 3, with a market share of just 15.5 percent, far behind Indigo’s 37.9 percent in June 2016 and Jet’s 19.1 percent. It is not the price-setter, and is in no shape to set the terms in the Indian aviation market.
16/08/16 R Jagannathan/Swarajya
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