HONG KONG, China—Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific on Wednesday posted a loss of just over US$703 million for last year, a massive improvement on the record loss suffered in 2020 even as the airline struggled with tough travel restrictions.
Chairman Patrick Healy said the company “continued to face serious challenges” and the overall loss for the year was “substantial” despite a considerable improvement in the second half.
Cathay’s result was a vast improvement from its record losses of HK$21.6 billion ($2.8 billion) in 2020, which Healey described as the “most challenging” year in the airline’s seven-decade history.
Cathay recorded an attributable loss of HK$5.5 billion for the full year, recovering ground in the second half of the year with a HK$2 billion attributable profit.
“The exceptional performance of our cargo business, especially during the second-half peak season, was extremely encouraging,” Healy said.
The average estimate from analysts tracked by Bloomberg was for an annual loss of HK$9.8 billion.
Cathay also beat its own forecast in January when it expected a net loss of HK$5.6 billion-HK$6.1 billion.
Hong Kong has imposed some of the world’s harshest travel restrictions under its “zero-COVID” policy, isolating a city that was once one of the world’s largest logistics and transportation hubs.
Cathay said passenger numbers were down 85 percent from 2020, with the airline flying just 1,965 passengers a day on average in 2021, and a far cry from the 35.2 million transported in pre-COVID 2019.
Strict quarantine rules for aircrew that Hong Kong imposed in February 2021 were “very demanding” and had a “substantial impact” on Cathay’s travel business, Healy said.
Cargo was the bright spot, however, with revenue up 32 percent to HK$32.38 billion.
“Our cargo business performed exceptionally well,” Healy said, with Cathay’s freighter fleet operating at peak capacity towards the end of 2021 supplemented by extra cargo-only passenger flight operations.
Looking ahead, Hong Kong’s tight travel restrictions, with flights from several countries banned, were expected to continue to impact operations in 2022 as the city battles a massive outbreak of Omicron COVID-19 infections.
“We have had an extremely challenging start to 2022,” Healy said.
For 2022, Cathay said it expected to operate around two percent of its pre-coronavirus passenger flight capacity, with the figure for cargo flight capacity remaining at less than one-third.
“Though we are still facing many challenges, we have the utmost confidence in the long-term future of Cathay Pacific,” Healy said.