Country's
third largest carrier by market share, Spicejet on Thursday said it hopes to
take delivery of the first shipment of directly imported aviation fuel by early
July.
"We
will be the first carrier to import ATF directly, as we hope to take the
delivery of the first shipment early July," Spicejet chief executive Neil
Mills told agencies in a post-earnings conference call on Thursday.
On
April 18, the director general of foreign trade, apex government authority on
exports and imports, had allowed Spicejet to import aviation fuel directly,
making it the first airline to get such an approval.
Early
February, the government had allowed airlines to import fuel directly as part
of its steps to help the bleeding airlines, which are set to close FY12 with
nearly USD 2 billion in losses.
Mills
further said the airline hopes to save considerably in fuel costs with this
direct import. While Spicejet saw its fuel bills shooting up 55 per cent in the
last quarter of the past fiscal, for the full fiscal of 2012, it was still
higher at 64 per cent for the Chennai-based carrier.
On
with whom the company has tied up for ATF transport, logistics and storage
facilities, Mills refused to reveal the name, citing confidentiality with the
partner but said they have tied up with a private company.
While
refusing to give guidance for the first quarter of the current fiscal, Mills
said he was 'hopeful of a strong recovery this quarter' as there has been a
steep fall in crude prices, from USD 116 barrel in the Q1 of 2012 Brent crude
is trading at USD 106-107 to a barrel now.
"Coupled
with fall in crude prices and direct import of ATF will help us save big time
in fuel cost," he added.
On
Wednesday, Spicejet reported a four-fold jump in Q4 losses at Rs 249 crore,
despite a 46 percent increase in sales to over Rs 1,100 crore.
The
Kalanithi Maran-run carrier had reported a loss of Rs 59 crore a year-ago. On
the possible impact of the steep 346 per cent hike in airport charges in Delhi
from May 1 on its bottomlines, Mills said, last fiscal the airline paid Rs 20
crore in fees to the Delhi airport operator and added that there will be an
impact on the airline's expenses with this development.
On
whether the airline will completely pass on the fees hike to the passengers,
Mills said, already the tickets are sold much below cost and he is forced to
pass on the hike to passengers. But, he did not quantify the increase.
For
the full year, the company's net loss stood at Rs 605 crore against a net
profit of Rs 101 crore in the prior year, while income rose to Rs 3,998 crore
from Rs 2,938 crore.
While
net sales of Spicejet soared 46 percent to over Rs 1,100 crore in Q4 of last
fiscal against Rs 760 crore year ago, average passenger yields too rose 18 per
cent.
The
losses are glaring as the airline saw its passenger traffic growing a healthy
24 per cent, outperforming the industry growth of around 16 per cent.
Load
factor also rose to 81 per cent from was 74.4 per cent during the same period,
which helped it ramp up its market share to 17.1 in the year, from 13.6 per
cent in March 2011.
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