LONDON(AP)
British Airways said Friday it will pay a dividend for the first
time in seven years after reporting its full-year profits more than
doubled.
The carriers profits rose to 680 million pounds ($1.3 billion),
from 290 million pounds in the previous 12 months.
Profit from continuing operations was up 59 percent to 696
million pounds ($1.35 billion).
Revenue rose 3.1 percent to 8.75 billion pounds ($17
billion).
The company said it would return 58 million pounds ($113
million) to shareholders, paying 5 pence (9.7 cents) per share.
British Airways shares rose 4 percent to 2233 pence ($4.53).
In the fourth quarter, British Airways said revenue rose 10.3
percent to 2.1 billion pounds ($4.1 billion), and it achieved a
pretax profit of 95 million pounds ($185 million) despite fuel
costs rising nearly 20 percent. The company did not break out
details of its fourth-quarter performance.
Airline chief executive Willie Walsh said he would forego his
bonus after a disastrous move to a new terminal at London's
Heathrow Airport that left thousands of passengers stranded. And
the airline warned results from the current quarter may be hampered
by fallout from the Heathrow move and the soaring price of
fuel.
Walsh would have been entitled to a bonus of up to 700,000
pounds ($1.36 million) based on various performance targets, but he
was under pressure to refuse it following the chaotic opening of
Heathrow's Terminal 5 on March 27. Problems with the baggage
handling system led to hundreds of flight cancellations and
thousands of bags going astray.
British Airways now plans to begin moving long-haul flights to
the new terminal in June.
"I felt it would be inappropriate in the context of the
very disappointing opening of Terminal 5 in March," Walsh said
in a British Broadcasting Corp. radio interview.
"So despite the fact it was a record year in terms of our
financial performance, I advised the chairman that I thought it
would be inappropriate."
British Airways operations director, Gareth Kirkwood, and
customer services director David Noyes resigned following the
fiasco. This week Mark Bullock, managing director of Heathrow's
owner BAA, announced that he was stepping down.
British Airways predicted that revenues in the current year
would rise by about 4 percent, which is at the lower end of its
previously announced guidance.
"The first quarter will be particularly difficult,"
the airline said.
"Crude prices have risen from $58 per barrel in the first
quarter last year to some $115 this year. The delayed transition to
Terminal 5 affects both costs and revenue, and will feature in the
quarter and full year as we deal with the challenges of the move
into the terminal."
Walsh said talks continued with U.S. carriers American Airlines
and Continental Airlines on possible "opportunities for
cooperation."
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