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jetflyger
21st Apr 2007, 01:08
Sink or swim: Haruka Nishimatsu, chief executive Japan Airlines
By Nicholas Ionides

http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2007/03/19/212611/sink-or-swim-haruka-nishimatsu-chief-executive-japan.html

Photography by Kevin Phillips
Haruka Nishimatsu is challenging the corporate culture at Japan Airlines, as he attempts to bring the troubled carrier back from the brink

A recent restructuring document issued by Japan Airlines (JAL) contained the revelation that chief executive Haruka Nishimatsu had taken a 60% pay cut, giving him a base annual salary of just ¥9.6 million (or $80,000).

Sceptics may call it a public relations move, but in a country where sizeable bonuses are not a major part of the culture, it is more than that. JAL's pilots make far more, for example, and for Nishimatsu the pay cut is intended to send a clear message to his staff.

Fighting chance

Being promoted to chief executive at JAL came as a surprise to Haruka Nishimatsu, as his predecessor had only been appointed to the top post barely a year earlier.

Nishimatsu, now 59, was suddenly thrust into the spotlight, almost 34 years after joining JAL following his graduation from Tokyo University.

Starting in the flight crew training department, Nishimatsu moved to the finance department in 1974. In 1980 he joined the traffic division in charge of budgets for airport offices, and in 1983 transferred to corporate planning where he was in charge of finance issues.

In 1987 he was posted to Frankfurt as administration manager of JAL's city and airport offices, and in 1991 returned to Tokyo where he rejoined the finance department, where he remained until becoming chief executive.

His last role was as senior managing director of finance and investor relations.

Nishimatsu's favourite pastime is golf. He is also an avid reader and says good red wine is his drink of choice. He is married with one son and one daughter.
Asia's largest airline group by revenue and traffic, JAL has been in financial trouble for years and it is finally acknowledging that drastic action is required after years of complacency. This action cannot come soon enough, for in a few years, major change will come to the Japanese market as more slots become available at Tokyo's congested Haneda and Narita airports. The new capacity is being eagerly awaited by competitors keen to take JAL on. If JAL does not get its house in order by then it runs the risk of descending deeper into a hole from which it could struggle to emerge.

JAL has a weak balance sheet, steep debts and a bloated workforce. In addition its corporate culture is so caught up in ways of the past that change cannot be pushed through quickly enough to meet market realities. All this as main competitor All Nippon Airways (ANA) has successfully restructured its business and is in a strong financial position. JAL, in contrast, suffers ugly financial mood swings with profits one year and losses the next in 2005-6 it suffered a net loss of ¥47.2 billion and an operating loss of ¥26.8 billion.

Nishimatsu, a career JAL employee, was unexpectedly named chief executive last year after predecessor Toshiyuki Shinmachi was ousted in a staff revolt after only a year in office. The new chief executive admits "there is a long road ahead of me" in terms of turning the company around, but he firmly believes JAL is salvageable.

Time for change

He of course must believe that, but it is clear that Nishimatsu is trying to push real change through the organisation. For a man who spent most of his career behind the scenes in finance roles, he is remarkably confident in speaking his mind about what needs to change, from the top down.

"Fundamentally the employees do understand that JAL is at present in a very severe situation," Nishimatsu said in an interview in Japanese capital Tokyo just days after releasing his four-year restructuring blueprint. "But we are very limited in terms of time. We only have until 2010."

At the heart of Nishimatsu's vision is slashing JAL's $14 billion debt by one-third alongside direct cost-cutting, which he says is of the highest priority. Plans call for the size of the workforce to be reduced further with several thousand more job cuts, the fleet to be modernised and many more non-core assets to be sold. JAL has also finally joined the oneworld alliance after years of playing hard to get.

The financial markets have given a generally muted reaction to the carrier's latest restructuring plan, with some analysts saying management finally appears committed to real cost-cutting, but others saying it does not go far enough. Nishimatsu agrees it is tougher than other plans that have been drawn up over the past six years, but at the same time he says it must be realistic.

"There are distinguishing characteristics that make this business plan very different from previous ones," he says. "One is that until now the top line was projected in a very optimistic way and this time we have really held down these revenue numbers and made them as realistic as possible. We are trying to work within these very limited revenue figures and trying to cut down costs as much as possible. That makes it a much more realistic business plan compared with others.

"The second is we have really tried to cut down costs, especially in terms of personnel costs. We want to raise efficiency in terms of personnel costs, and we are making drastic reductions of personnel.

"The third is that for an airline we have had a remarkably diverse range of businesses. Now we have taken stock of this again and decided to definitely withdraw from many businesses."

The "Medium-Term Revival Plan", which covers the 2007-10 financial years, focuses heavily on reducing the group's wage bill by a projected ¥50 billion annually. This will come in part from stepped-up job cuts, which have already been taking place through natural attrition since 2002, when JAL acquired Japan Air System (JAS).

By March 2010 the group workforce is to be reduced to 48,800 from 53,100 under the plan. There will also be "a bold review of the work process to increase workforce productivity by 10%", while a 10% across-the-board basic wage cut that was implemented last year remains in place.

Fleet changes are also forecast to save JAL tens of millions of yen annually, by stepping up an "aircraft downsizing" programme and replacing less-efficient, older aircraft with new Boeing 737-800s and 787s, and Embraer 170 regional jets. The aim is to reduce the number of types as well as the percentage of large aircraft - 777s and 747s - to 21% in fiscal 2010 from the current 29%. For international operations alone, the reduction will be to 39% from 58%.

JAL also plans to continue shifting more operations to subsidiary carriers with lower cost bases, after already making several rounds of route suspensions both domestically and internationally. By fiscal 2010, JALways and JAL Express will be operating 37% of the group's international passenger flights, up from 24%. JAL Express and J-Air will account for 26% of domestic flight operations by fiscal 2010, up from 15%.

Nishimatsu says these and other cost-reduction measures should help JAL record an operating profit of ¥35 billion in 2007, rising to ¥88 billion in fiscal 2010, while revenue is forecast to increase modestly, to ¥2.29 trillion by fiscal 2010 from ¥2.2 trillion in 2007. For the just-ended financial year JAL expects an operating profit of ¥13 billion on revenue of ¥2.26 trillion.

External shocks

JAL has made such forecasts in the past and they have not been realised, but Nishimatsu says that in fairness the airline has faced unexpected "external shocks" in recent years. These include the impact of the 2001 terrorist attacks in the USA and the subsequent war in Iraq, terrorist bombings on the Indonesian island of Bali in 2002, the SARS epidemic in 2003 and high fuel prices that started to be seen in 2004.

In 2005 and 2006 JAL was also hurt by highly public safety issues that led to an unprecedented government "business improvement order" and prompted many travellers to switch their business to rival ANA.

While the government censure could have been prevented had systems been better, JAL was particularly vulnerable to the events abroad, as it was so reliant on international passenger revenues. Until just a few years ago around 70% of its passenger revenue came from international operations, while the minority came from less-volatile domestic operations. The solution was to acquire JAS, with which JAL had effectively been splitting the near 50% of the domestic market that market leader ANA did not control.

Legal formalities were completed in October 2002 and integration work began right away, but it proceeded far too slowly. Workforces were not integrated rapidly enough and the decision making slowed.

The corporate structure has since been streamlined and is now far less bloated and "top heavy". And Nishimatsu says that in the bigger picture the JAS takeover was without question positive for JAL. "I think frankly that without this merger, without this increase in our domestic business, JAL might not have survived as it is," he says.

"If we compare it to a human body, the international business represents the upper portion of the body and the domestic business the bottom portion. The top portion is more flashy, but the lower half serves as the foundation. Right now, with the incorporation of JAS, our domestic and international businesses are about 50:50, and I think the ratio could be even bigger for the domestic business."

Things will change, with a fourth runway opening at Haneda airport in 2009 which will increase take-off and landing slots by more than 40%, to 407,000 per year from 285,000. This will give competitors - ANA as well as new carriers such as Air Do and Skymark Airlines - more opportunity to challenge it.

Also at Narita airport, which mainly handles international flights, a secondary runway is being extended to 2,500m (8,200ft) from 2,180m, allowing it to handle larger aircraft from early 2010 and catering to more flights by local and foreign competitors.

But Nishimatsu says it is not all negative on the competitive front, as JAL sees the potential for significant growth of its own as a result of the airport expansions, which will enable it to compete more effectively with other modes of transport. Both JAL and ANA have trouble competing with the high-speed, high-frequency trains due to airport capacity limitations.

"Overall the positive possibilities outweigh the negatives by a large margin. With the increased capacity at Haneda certainly we may see more potential for newcomers, but I think when we talk about their productivity, the infrastructure that they have, I don't know how they are going to be able to take advantage of the opportunities at Haneda in a very big way, in the way that we can," he says.

Opportunities at Haneda

Japan Airlines at a glance

Revenue $1.93 billion

Change -2.5%

Operating margin -1.2%

Net margin -2.2%

RPK growth -4.9%

ASK growth -7.7%

Load factor 69.2%

Year end March 2006

Airline Business 2005 financial ranking 5

Airline Business 2005 traffic ranking 9
"Another concern that people have with the increased number of slots at Haneda is that there might be an oversupply of seats. But we don't think that this is going to be a problem primarily because we intend to increase the frequency of our flights and at the same time we intend to downsize, or decrease, the size of our aircraft. The average number of seats for flights coming into and flying out of Haneda is 313 and the world average is 150, so in other words Haneda's average is double that of the world and this is something that needs to be dealt with."

Haneda's fourth runway will allow for the partial "internationalisation" of the airport, which is mainly a domestic facility but more attractive for many travellers than Narita as it is so much closer to the business districts of Tokyo.

From Haneda, airlines are expected to be allowed to serve destinations up to 2,000km away. Nishimatsu believes JAL will be able to offer around 15 international flights a day from Haneda during daytime hours, and these should cater mainly to high-yield business traffic. Winning more of this segment of the market is another key focus of his business plan.

But to take advantage of the benefits, JAL needs to become more proactive and improve its decision-making processes. Nishimatsu is trying to convince staff to speak their minds and in a bid to foster this he is moving out of his private office and sharing an open space with other top executives. But he recognises that reshaping the conservative corporate culture will be a drawn-out process. "It is easily said, difficult to do. Certainly the situation is not ideal yet, but at the same time I do see hopeful signs," Nishimatsu says.

"One thing I see definitely happening is that people express their opinions much more frequently than before. We are getting more opinions, we are getting more voices. They come directly to me, which is a tremendous improvement. It is a completely different situation than we found ourselves in several years ago."

What JAL also hopes will help push change forward is its membership in oneworld, which Nishimatsu says will expose it to other styles of management. Its delays in joining perhaps highlight what was wrong with JAL for so long. Being as conservative as it was, it was the last of the top 15 IATA member passenger airlines to commit to joining an alliance, and in Nishimatsu's view that was a mistake.

"We should have joined before now," he says with clear regret in his voice. "In the past JAL has taken a rather conservative view as to what the benefits of joining an alliance might be. The reason is that until now JAL has had about 80% of its international passengers as Japanese. In regard to the non-Japanese people market we have not had a concerted effort and success in opening up that market. I think that with the alliance and the services we can offer through the alliance, there may be great potential benefits for JAL that we haven't really understood yet."

He adds: "But it is not simply enough to just join. If we do not take advantage of all the opportunities that are given to us then I think the benefits are going to be decreased by half."

Nishimatsu says that in the big picture, JAL's change process has to be much more than just talk - Asia's biggest airline needs to genuinely be overhauled. While some say his plan does not go far enough, particularly in terms of job cuts, Nishimatsu says pragmatism must be adhered to. He also insists that if his targets are not met that he will take full responsibility.

"If you were to ask is this the perfect, completely realisable cost-cutting plan, then that is a very difficult thing to declare," he says. "But if we don't achieve our targets, I do not intend to stay on."

Rice bowl licker
1st May 2007, 02:23
Good article...

gengis
28th Aug 2009, 21:57
Devine Wind, I suspect that ANA's pilot union is hardly any different.

Needless to say, if they pursue the silly line, it would truly be "Kamikaze" (divine wind?)

Time will tell.

crj705
29th Aug 2009, 14:47
Given that the article is two and a half years old, I would say that their business plan still isn't working given their last quarter's results. Even so, there is no way the government would let JAL go out of business.

Storpikk
30th Aug 2009, 09:27
Devine Wind, My friend....you have hit the nail on the head with this buffoons at JAL. The silly pilot unions acting like spoiled brats, archaic management style, and the complete lack of corporate foresight, they are stuck in the 1950's when they where flying DC-6.

JAL's idea of reinventing themselves, is to brush the dust of some old company bureaucrat and roll it out as "THE NEW JAL". This is why this company would never make it in the "real" world. They are propped up by the Japanese government trough government guaranteed loans and favoritism. Unfortunately Japanese taxpayers are getting fed up, with the constant financial help JAL Group require every time they management team of old geezers "ball" it up.

JAL's future seems bleak, as they will not be able to compete with more lean and modern airlines, that will for sure give them competition, as the new runways at Narita and Haneda opens up in a couple years.

JAL is a dinosaur at best, and we all know how that went eventually...change comes with very small baby steps in this company, and by then I believe its to late.

Just my two cents..:}:}:}

armchairpilot94116
11th Sep 2009, 15:54
Delta In Talks To Buy Big JAL Stake - Report (http://news.airwise.com/story/view/1252666343.html)

September 11, 2009
Delta Air Lines is in talks to invest in struggling Japan Airlines (JAL) and become its biggest shareholder, Japanese media said Friday.

Public broadcaster NHK and Kyodo news said Delta was in talks to invest several tens of billions of yen in JAL, Asia's largest airline by revenue, as part of a business alliance.

"I can't verify what has been reported by NHK and can't comment further at this time," said a JAL spokeswoman.

JAL is headed for its second straight loss this business year and is restructuring under state supervision after receiving a JPY100 billion credit facility backed by the government.

JAL and Delta are also talking about code-sharing on international flights, Kyodo and NHK said.

JAL reported a JPY50.9 billion operating loss for the year to March 2009 and has forecast a JPY59 billion loss for the current year, as it struggles to control costs and suffers along with other airlines due to a slump in global travel.

(Reuters)

sony
11th Sep 2009, 17:53
It will be interesting to see what percentage of JAL the Japanese government will allow a foreign carrier to buy. My guess is, the percentage a foreign company can own of any Japanese company is capped at 25% or something similar. At most it would be 49%. Pretty much every major country in the world has these rules.

armchairpilot94116
11th Sep 2009, 21:33
Although with it racking up losses of one billion USD a year and more, the govt may be happy to see it go into foreign hands. Otherwise they may have been secretly thinking of canning them entirely. And reinventing the new JAL.

powerstall
12th Sep 2009, 00:04
If that's the case they could sell almost everything to Delta, and when everything has been said and done, the government could put up a new flag carrier against JAL. :ok:

a345xxx
12th Sep 2009, 01:40
JAL is going to be around a lot longer then any American, European Middle Eastern or Asian carrier.

armchairpilot94116
13th Sep 2009, 05:01
American Airlines is muscling in the action:

AP Source: American Airlines talking with JAL - Taiwan News Online (http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1055882&lang=eng_news&cate_img=35.jpg&cate_rss=news_Business)

AP Source: American Airlines talking with JAL
By DAVID KOENIG
Associated Press
2009-09-13 08:06 AM
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American Airlines parent AMR Corp. is negotiating for closer ties and possibly an investment in financially troubled Japan Airlines Corp., according to a person familiar with the talks.
American would like to form a joint business venture with JAL in which the two carriers would seek antitrust immunity to work closely in setting schedules and prices for service around the world, according to the person, who spoke Saturday on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the talks.

The negotiations, which grew more intense over the past four weeks and included meetings in Texas and Tokyo, raised the specter of a bidding war for a piece of JAL.

Delta Air Lines Inc., the world's biggest airline operator, also is in preliminary discussions about buying a stake in JAL for about $300 million. Delta could become a leading shareholder in JAL and get coveted access to Haneda Airport, which is close Tokyo's business district, according to a person briefed on the Delta situation.

A spokesman for Fort Worth, Texas-based AMR, Roger Frizzell, said, "We are in discussions at the senior executive level in Japan with JAL." He declined to comment further.

The person familiar with AMR's negotiations said that while AMR might invest in JAL, the two sides had not settled on an amount or the nature of the investment. AMR could buy a stake in JAL or invest in senior debt that could be converted to stock, the person said.

A cash infusion would help JAL, which reported a $1 billion loss in its most recent quarter.

American and JAL already have a so-called code-sharing agreement in which they sell seats on each other's flights. If they won immunity from antitrust laws, they could cooperate in setting prices and schedules. For example, instead of each operating a Chicago-to-Tokyo flight around the same time, they could stagger the flights to maximize traffic while splitting the revenue.

Delta, which declined to comment, doesn't have a Japanese partner. A Delta-JAL hookup would raise doubts about JAL's ability to remain in oneworld, an alliance of airlines that includes American and British Airways. Delta is in another alliance, called SkyTeam, which also includes Air France-KLM.

A Japanese newspaper reported Saturday that JAL has entered talks with Air France-KLM. Yomiuri, Japan's top-selling daily, said JAL hoped to expand its business in Europe with through Air France-KLM.

JAL officials said Friday that they were considering various tie-ups with a wide variety of potential partners, but nothing had been decided.

JAL is in the midst of major restructuring. The airline posted its biggest-ever quarterly loss of 99 billion yen ($1 billion) in the April-to-June period. It has forecast a net loss of 63 billion yen for the current fiscal year, which ends next March, and plans to cut the number of flights and slash costs by 53 billion yen during this fiscal year and another 100 billion yen in the next year.

TWN PPL
14th Sep 2009, 12:37
JAL Shares Jump on American Airlines, Delta Talks

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan Airlines (JAL)shares jumped on Monday following news that the struggling airline was in talks on investment by American Airlines and Delta Airlines.

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/09/13/business/business-us-jal.html

Marcel_MPH
14th Sep 2009, 23:00
Another article here on why both airlines are interested in investing in JAL...

Worldwide-Aviation.net (http://worldwide-aviation.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=139:why-delta-and-american-want-to-invest-in-jal&catid=34:airilnes&Itemid=61)

ulxima
20th Sep 2009, 13:42
UPDATE: British Air Says Trying To Keep JAL In Alliance - WSJ.com (http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20090918-705694.html)

What do you think about this guys?
It looks odd to me, given the financial troubles of BA.

Cheers,
Ulxima

Kaptin M
31st Oct 2009, 01:06
SAVE JAL NATIONAL CAMPAIGN

The Japanese people know the importance of JAL to their country, and I reckon a campaign to "Save JAL" should be run nationally.

Japan Airlines provides essential, life-giving support to many small towns and cities that make up the fabric of the Japanese economy. Without the produce, and products supplied from these small out-centres, and the associated employment they provide, many of these small towns would shrink, or die, and the unemployment in the large cities would increase noticeably.

All Nippon Airways (ANA) operates only to those destinations where the airline makes a profit.
JAL was left holding the unprofitable routes when it was privatised, but was unable to pull out due to pressure, both from the local townspeople, and the previous owner, the government.

I think if every employed Japanese citizen were asked to donate at least 1 day of their annual vacation, and JAL employees a minimum of 3 days to a "Save JAL" campaign, there would be a feeling of national pride in their achievement, as opposed to seeing the Government spend the (same taxpayers') money, and being criticised for it.

The loss of 1 vacation day would not be missed, but would contribute meaningfully, and massively to keeping an essential service in place.

ORAC
19th Nov 2009, 11:48
The Times, London: US rivals circle as loss-making Japan Airlines flies into peril (http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/transport/article6922066.ece)

Japan Airlines (JAL), which may have only enough cash to fund ten more days of operation, could be allowed to go bankrupt if a rescue package does not emerge quickly, the Government hinted yesterday.

The scramble to secure a viable future for JAL is primed to trigger turmoil throughout the global airline industry as rival alliances lunge for its extensive collection of international routes. For carriers in the United States, JAL’s crisis represents a rare opportunity to extend their foothold in the Asian market. Two cash-injection offers, each worth more than $1 billion (£596 million), are now on the table for JAL as American Airlines and Delta Airlines vie to buy the critical partnership. If Delta could lure JAL to the SkyTeam alliance, analysts said that the move would deal a heavy blow to British Airways and other members of the OneWorld grouping.

Despite the offers, however, the market remained focused on the risk of bankruptcy. Yesterday’s surprise change of position by the Japanese Transport Minister could herald something most Japanese thought they would never live to witness: the Government allowing a national flag carrier to fail, exactly 22 years since it was privatised amid a great fanfare.

Recent days have revealed the spectacularly poor shape of JAL’s business. Last Friday, it announced a record first-half loss of 131 billion yen (£875 million) and, humiliatingly, said that it was unable to make a forecast for the full year. The company has also been heavily criticised for the way in which it calculates its net worth. A recently disbanded rehabilitation task force composed of government and private sector experts concluded that JAL had a negative net worth of Y250 billion. JAL itself states its net assets at Y159 billion.

This year has dragged JAL dangerously closer to collapse as it struggles to recover from decades of bad management, a disastrous 2002 merger with JAS, a smaller rival, and years of running unprofitable routes. In latter years, pension deficits and the weight of debt-servicing have crushed JAL’s ability to compete. Yet throughout that time, the assumption has always been that when financial troubles really became unbearable, the State would always step in with a rescue package, as it has done before.

Speaking after a parliamentary committee assembled to discuss how to secure JAL’s survival, Seiji Maehara, the Transport Minister, said that he “had never said that we would exclude the option of legal bankruptcy”. With its future looking bleaker by the minute, shares in JAL sagged below the Y100 mark for the first time.

With a decision now likely to be forced on JAL, two deals have been laid before it. TPG, the private equity firm, is offering to invest Y100 billion via a private placement of stock. That money would effectively support a Y30 billion cash injection offer from American, which says that it could also offer practical support to JAL’s recovery. That deal would keep JAL in the OneWorld alliance, which American believes brings in about $500 million a year in revenues for JAL.

The proposal from Delta and SkyTeam matches the TPG offer and comprises direct cash injection, asset-backed funding and a sizeable revenue guarantee. Edward Bastian, Delta’s president, arrived in Tokyo this week to push his alliance as the best solution to JAL’s crisis. Mr Bastian, issuing lavish revenue projections should JAL choose to defect, said that Delta carried 3.7 million customers a year from the US to Japan, many more than the 700,000 customers he claimed that American carried.

Melu pilot at tra-EU
19th Nov 2009, 14:05
Recently, it came to the news at the embassy as well, that JAL is not in a position of hiring the new people. In addition, they had left many people without a chance of renewing the contracts. So, some of the people are feeling frustrated. Therefore, these who are losing the contracts with JAL or JAL express and etc,,, try to focus the attention at EU carriers, without these visas worries, or try to contact EU embassies as well, which for sure might assist in handling the visas issues if one had chosen an EU carrier and is aware of the visas as so often stated. Usually the contracts start in a nice way, but has its own ends as well. So the mass contracts cancellation had also reached other territories. :)