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Finnair announces plans to revamp its business model

04.10.2022

We are working on a strategy renewal and we want to communicate more about our direction and the changes it brings in the autumn. Finnair reported that its second-quarter revenue increased by more than 390 per cent year-on- year, from 112 to 550 million euro, as demand for air travel began to normalise and passenger volumes and load factors recovered, especially in Europe and the United States. Its comparable operating result was similar to the previous year, but it remained more than 84 million euro in the red.

The airline pointed out that record-high fuel prices had an adverse cost impact of around 126 million euro compared to the previous year, an impact that was compounded by the longer routes necessitated by the closure of Russian airspace.

The airline operated about 64 per cent of its active capacity in 2019, with the airspace closure restricting flying to the traditionally important markets of Japan and South Korea. By wet-leasing six percent of its aircraft capacity to partner airlines, it was able to provide work for around 600 employees.

Finnair was impacted by one crisis after another during the second quarter of 2022, he summarised. The impacts of the severe, two-years- and-counting epidemic started to be lessened as demand recovered, but at the same time we felt the full weight of the war in Ukraine. Finnair believes that its operating results for the entire year will be negatively for the third consecutive year due to the war in Ukraine.

The airline's share price fell by nine per cent to 0.41 euro on the Helsinki Stock Exchange on Tuesday due to the worse-than-expected operating result and muted short-term outlook. The shares have lost a third of their value since the beginning of the year.