Cathay Pacific Reports Their Largest Loss Ever

Cathay Pacific Reports Their Largest Loss Ever

BY JONATHAN ARTHUR Published on March 15, 2021 0 COMMENTS

Cathay Pacific - known as the flag carrier of Hong Kong announced their annual results on 10th March. "The Cathay Pacific Group experienced the most challenging 12 months of its more than 70-year history in 2020. COVID-19, and the resultant travel restrictions and quarantine requirements in place around the world, brought about an unprecedented disruption of the global air travel market and the repercussions have been huge. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) estimates that global passenger traffic will not return to pre-COVID-19 levels until 2024," was announced by Patrick Healy, chairman of the CPA group. The pandemic gives a hard impact on the aviation industry, along with the social unrest in 2019, Cathay has become one of the airlines which suffers the hardest impact among most airlines. Last October, Cathay announced 8500 job cuts and immediate closure of their regional brand Cathay Dragon as a plan of restructuring the company. Besides the carrier also did a wrong step on the contract of fuel hedging, therefore it causes a 3.02 billion loss on the annual report.

 

 

AeroXplorer| Arthur Chow

 

Due to the pandemic, the demand for personal protective equipment and masks has raised, Cathay Pacific and Air Hong Kong have shipped more freight to different ports with their jet's belly and freighters, providing temporary service to Tasmania and Pittsburgh. As the carrier faces the growing amount of cargo, Cathay removes economy class seats from 6 B777-300ER for extra "Cargo Only" service. Moreover, they also fly A350 to different destinations with cargo in bulk. Enter the year 2021, the mass production of the COVID vaccine has started, Cathay has already transported 1 million doses of Sinovac from Beijing, and 1 million doses of Pharma/BioNTech(Pfizer) vaccines to Hong Kong. Cathay also transported 800 thousand doses of vaccine to Mexico.

 

 

Photo of B-LRF - Cathay Pacific Airbus A350-900 at YVR
AeroXplorer | Brandon Siska

 

According to the report, the amount of passengers who travels on Cathay is only 25% compared to the same year of 2019"s data. Due to the low demand for air travel, Cathay has already sent 50+ jets to Alice Spring which is located in the center of Australia. A330, B777-300, and mostly are B777-300ER. According to the latest source, 34 jets already stored in ASP or CQM will be retired

soon than the scheduled timetable.

 

Apart from retiring old birds, Cathay will receive 4 A321NEO, 1 A350-900, and 2 A350-1000 (B-LXO delivered a couple of weeks ago) in 2021. For Long term plan on their fleet, 21 777X are set to be delivered to the carrier from 2025, as their subsidiary Hong Kong Express would receive their first A321NEO in 2022, which would be delivered from 2022 to 2025.

 

Photo of B-KQS - Cathay Pacific Boeing 777-300ER at HKG
AeroXplorer | Lucas Wu

 

Entering the first quarter of 2021, the world tends to adapt the "New Normal" under COVID, maintain personal hygiene, wear a face mask and social distancing has been a part of our level. Experts predicted aviation industry will start its journey for returning to pre COVID levels as early as 3rd quarter in 2021, it's a flip over in the aviation industry, airlines bankruptcy, retirement of different aircraft, and changing the way we travel, it brings a hard impact to our lives, just hope everything will return to normal in the future!

 

Source : Cathay Pacific 2020 Annual results

 

 AeroXplorer is on Telegram! Subscribe to the AeroXplorer Telegram Channel to receive aviation news updates as soon as they are released. View Channel 
Jonathan Arthur
This user has no bio yet.

Comments (0)

Add Your Comment

TIPLogin or sign up to personalize your AeroXplorer experience.

TAGS

NEWS annual results cathay pacific flag carrier hong kong aviation news

RECENTLY PUBLISHED

Three of Europe's Biggest Airlines Have Extended Their Middle East Suspensions, and the Restart Dates Are Further Away Than Many Passengers Hoped Three of Europe's largest airline groups have simultaneously extended their Middle East flight suspensions, with British Airways pushing its restart further into summer, the Lufthansa Group holding off a return to Dubai until mid-September, and Air France emerging as the most optimistic of the three with planned resumptions beginning as early as late May. NEWS READ MORE »
United Airlines Flew Passengers Across the Pacific for 13 Hours With No Screens, No Wi-Fi and No Way to Charge Their Devices A routine transpacific journey turned into an uncomfortable test of endurance for passengers aboard United Airlines flight UA-804 after a technical fault rendered the entire cabin entertainment infrastructure inoperable for the full duration of the flight. NEWS READ MORE »
Atlanta Just Voted to Study Replacing TSA at the World's Busiest Airport The Atlanta City Council voted unanimously on Monday, May 18, 2026, to commission a formal feasibility study into replacing federal TSA security screening at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport with a private contractor under the government's existing Screening Partnership Programme. NEWS READ MORE »


×
AeroXplorer+

More than just headlines.

Get unlimited ad-free access to in-depth aviation news, premium stories, and exclusive insights other sites don't cover.

  • Ad-free browsing on AeroXplorer
  • Unlimited access to premium and exclusive articles
  • Higher photo upload limits & commissions on sales
  • Free access to Jetstream Magazine on higher tiers
Join over 3,000 aviation enthusiasts. Cancel anytime.
Basic+ $2.99/mo
  • Ad-free browsing
  • Sell aviation photos with 60% commission



What is your estimated annual budget for aviation-related purchases?

We're building something new for our community.