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Coronavirus pandemic forces Sydney Airport into $2b raising

AAP
Sydney Airport has posted a loss as the coronavirus pandemic continues to stifle the aviation industry.
Camera IconSydney Airport has posted a loss as the coronavirus pandemic continues to stifle the aviation industry. Credit: News Corp Australia

Sydney Airport will cut costs and debt and warned jobs could be lost after the coronavirus pandemic hit its bottom line, forcing it into the red.

Australia’s most active airport on Tuesday reported a net loss of $53.6 million for the first half of this calendar year — a dramatic turnaround from a profit of $17.3 million for the same time last year.

First-half revenue was $511m, down 35.9 per cent as cash flow from aeronautical fees, retail and parking fees declined.

While the year started well, passenger volumes slumped by 56.6 per cent to 9.4 million people as COVID-19-related restrictions on travel began to be implemented from February.

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International passenger numbers are down 57.3 per cent and domestic traffic down 56.1 per cent.

“Six months into the pandemic, there remains uncertainty as to how long it will take for aviation markets to return to pre-COVID-19 levels,” chief executive Geoff Culbert said.

Sydney Airport said its operations would continue to be affected while domestic and international travel restrictions remained in place.

It is still aiming for a 35 per cent reduction in operating costs by April next year and again warned of potential job losses.

“The staff job guarantee will regretfully not be extended beyond 30 September 2020 and a review is currently under way to restructure the organisation,” it said.

Under the guarantee, Sydney Airport earlier this year promised to retain the jobs of its 500 employees for six months.

Sydney Airport also announced a $2 billion equity raising and will use the proceeds to cut its debt bill to $7 billion.

“At this time, no distribution is expected to be declared for 2020,” it said.

AAP

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