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Japan Airlines posts $1.5 billion first-half loss

Fri Nov 13, 2009 3:35 AM EST
business, as, airlines, japan-airlines
Yuri Kageyama, AP Business Writer
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showing 1 of 4 photos
<p>File - Aircraft of Japan's top carrier, Japan Airlines, are parked on the tarmac of Tokyo's Haneda International airport in this Nov. 8, 2006 file photo. Japan Airlines said Friday Nov. 13, 2009 it racked up $1.5 billion in losses during the first half and applied for government help to restructure. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye, File)</p>

File - Aircraft of Japan's top carrier, Japan Airlines, are parked on the tarmac of Tokyo's Haneda International airport in this Nov. 8, 2006 file photo. Japan Airlines said Friday Nov. 13, 2009 it racked up $1.5 billion in losses during the first half and applied for government help to restructure. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye, File)

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TOKYO — Japan Airlines said Friday it racked up a $1.5 billion loss and was seeking government help to fend off creditors as the beleaguered carrier struggles to recover from the travel industry's deepest slump in years.

The fate of Asia's largest airline was so uncertain that it abandoned any forecasts for the year — a sign of the hardships it faces as it presses for a government bailout and mulls painful cost-cutting steps that could slash thousands of jobs.

Japan Airlines Corp., long seen as the country's flagship carrier, booked a 32.1 billion yen ($356.7 million) loss for the second quarter through September, bringing its red ink for the fiscal first half to 131.2 billion yen ($1.5 billion).

The first-half loss was its biggest ever for the period and a reversal from last year's profit. Quarterly revenues tumbled 26 percent to 429.0 billion yen ($4.8 billion) as international and domestic travel, as well as cargo traffic, all dropped over the first half.

Speculation had been high the company's management would be ousted over the poor performance. But JAL President Haruka Nishimatsu said he and other executives would stay on at least through the turnaround.

"We feel very great responsibility," he told local media.

Japan Airlines, battered by a collapse in travel brought on by the global slowdown and a swine flu outbreak, said it was approved for a government-orchestreated "turnaround procedure," which could help it delay its massive debts to creditors. As of this month, the company's interest-bearing debt stood at some $9.5 billion.

The airline did not give any details of its turnaround plan.

In working to restore its balance sheet, the company has been embroiled in talks with retired workers to slash pension benefits that critics say need to be a key part of the restructuring plan.

Last week, JAL said it will end 17 routes — eight international, eight domestic and one cargo — over the next couple years. It said it will also close four overseas offices and two offices in Japan as part of its drive to reduce costs.

The latest turnaround is likely to involve job cuts, although the numbers are still unclear. Nishimatsu had earlier talked about reducing 5,800 jobs, or about 14 percent of JAL's global work force.

The company has been teetering for years, hammered by surging fuel prices, global competition and an image problem caused by a series of safety lapses. It had been gradually losing even Japanese customers to its local rival All Nippon Airways.

JAL also failed to be as nimble as some competitors in reducing unprofitable routes because it sought to preserve its status as a flagship carrier.

In recent years, its has tried to lower costs by cutting thousands of jobs, largely by attrition, introducing more fuel-efficient aircraft, focusing on premium business travelers, ending unprofitable routes and reducing the frequency of flights.

Also up in the air is the fate of Japan Airlines' global alliance, which it now has with American Airlines.

But it has been recently courted by Delta Air Lines to enter a rival alliance, which could bring in new investment money. Both U.S. carriers are drawn to JAL because of its valuable flights in China and Japan.

JAL has been American's partner since the mid-1990s. The companies sell each other's routes to their customers, share revenue and offer frequent-flier privileges to each other's passengers.

Nishimatsu said no decision has been made on a capital tie-up, but he said he will make a decision by the end of the year.

For the first half, the company said the number international passengers flying JAL slid 10 percent on year to 5.47 million people. Business travel declined because of the global slump, while a strong yen discouraged tourist traffic to Japan, the company said.

Shares of JAL, which reported after the close of trade, shed 1 percent finish at 106 yen ($1.2) on Friday.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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