PPRuNe Forums - View Single Post - IAG: BA restructuring may cost 12,000 jobs
Old 21st Jul 2020, 21:18
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Doors To Manuel
 
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Originally Posted by stormin norman
If somebody can post the current BA/IAG trading figures ( including current cash burn , forward bookings, and cash left in the bank ) it just might make some people look at things a bit differently.
This guy, Robert Boyle, former IAG director of strategy has got his head screwed on and is publishing some sensible factual stuff on his blog.
If you pop over here you will find it
https://rboyle.co.uk/2020/06/12/you-...till-its-gone/

If you only want a bite-sized chunk, here it is.

So let us do a crude calculation of the predicted liquidity position of IAG and Lufthansa at the end of Q2, by which time both companies are expected to have recommenced “a meaningful operation”. Lufthansa will have liquidity of €4.25 billion (the March position), plus the €9 billion stabilisation package, less three months of cash burn at €800m a month giving €10.9 billion. IAG gave a figure of €10 billion for their liquidity at the end of April, which I think went up from up €0.5 billion from the position at the end of March due to €1.3 billion raised from the UK and Spanish governments, offset by cash burn for April. That suggests a cash burn in April of €836m, slightly below the figure I calculated above. By the end of Q2, they will have burned another €1.9 billion, giving them €8.1 billion. Expressed in terms of their “normal” cash operating expenses when operating at full capacity (where Lufthansa is 1.7x the size of IAG), this gives Lufthansa 115 days of liquidity compared to IAG’s 147 days. Of course they both have many more days of liquidity than this, as this metric assumes zero revenue and full operating costs, but it is a good basis on which to compare the two companies.

Given the amount of assumptions that have gone into these calculations, my conclusion is that both companies will start the third quarter with similar levels of liquidity compared to the size of their pre COVID cost bases, with IAG in a somewhat better position (c 25% better). The big difference, of course, is how much backing it will have required from governments to get to that position. For Germany, it took €9 billion, compared to €1.3 billion for IAG, of which the UK government has only provided €0.3 billion.
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