Air Canada Releases May Traffic Results; Reports Ongoing Revenue Deterioration due to SARS; Provides Restructuring Update MONTREAL, June 11 /CNW Telbec/ - Air Canada mainline flew 26.4 percent fewer revenue passenger miles (RPMs) in May 2003 than in May 2002, according to preliminary traffic figures. Capacity decreased by 21.5 percent, resulting in a load factor of 71.6 percent, compared to 76.4 percent in May 2002; a decrease of 4.8 percentage points. Jazz, Air Canada's regional airline subsidiary, flew 9.5 percent fewer revenue passenger miles (RPMs) in May 2003 than in May 2002, according to preliminary traffic figures. Capacity decreased by 18.1 percent, resulting in a load factor of 60.6 percent, compared to 54.8 percent in May 2002; an increase of 5.8 percentage points. Revenue Environment ------------------- Following on a $125 million negative impact in April due to SARS, the revenue shortfall has deteriorated by more than $200 million year over year for May with another comparable shortfall expected for June. Most of the deterioration in May revenues can be attributed to SARS which has exacerbated an already permanently changed revenue environment for North American carriers in particular. Traffic on Asian routes is down 68 per cent and Toronto enplanements are down 22 per cent for the month. Additionally overall domestic traffic has been suppressed as normal international traffic flows connecting to Air Canada's domestic system are down considerably. The airline is experiencing an unprecedented directional imbalance in business traffic at its main hub with significantly more passengers originating in Toronto than from other cities destined for Toronto. Corporate policies directing business travellers to avoid Toronto and a general avoidance of Toronto as a connecting point are ongoing factors. "As can be seen from our results, the SARS outbreak continues to have a major negative impact on traffic, not only on our Asian routes but on our entire network, and in particular, our main hub at Toronto," said Robert Milton, President and Chief Executive Officer. "Given the ongoing concerns over the outbreaks in Toronto, other than for a few Asian Pacific carriers, SARS is proving more devastating to Air Canada than any other airline worldwide. Advance international bookings for the summer are weak and we expect that the entire Canadian tourism industry is under similar pressure. International travellers are avoiding Canada in general, linking the SARS outbreaks to the entire country rather than to Toronto where it has been contained," he said. "We currently expect the 2003 year over year revenue shortfall to be significantly in excess of $1 billion with no expectation of meaningful recovery before the third quarter of 2004," said Mr. Milton. Restructuring Update -------------------- At a meeting of its Board of Directors today the Board reviewed the Company's current restructuring plan, its May operating results and the continuing and forecast deterioration in the revenue environment. Elements of the restructuring plan include: - Fleet restructuring: downsize current fleet by at least 40 aircraft and introduce a 70-110 seat regional jet aircraft fleet as previously announced. - Product strategy: re-position the airline to provide high frequency, quality, affordable air service. - Lowering operating costs: reduce annual operating costs by at least $2.1 billion, inclusive of annual labour cost savings equal to $1.1 billion. - Deleveraging Air Canada: significantly reduce the debt level of Air Canada. - Enhanced liquidity: raise new equity and debt financing currently estimated to be $1.35 billion in order to ensure the minimum level of liquidity for a successful restructuring. The Board approved a plan to seek the debt and equity financing required to fund a successful emergence from CCAA proceedings. In such circumstances, it is highly likely that a substantial portion of the company's unsecured debt will be converted to new equity and that there will not be any meaningful recovery to existing equity of the Company. This discussion contains certain forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties. As a result of many factors including acts or potential acts of terrorism, international conflicts, government regulations and government mandated restrictions on operations and pricing, fuel prices, industry restructuring, labour negotiations, the economic environment in general including foreign exchange and interest rates, the airline competitive and pricing environment, industry capacity decisions and new entrants as well as external events, actual results could differ from expected results and the differences could be material. << ________________________________________________________________________ AIR CANADA MAINLINE (Includes Tango, Zip & Jetz) _________________________________________________________________________ MAY YEAR-TO-DATE _________________________________________________________________________ 2003 2002 Change 2003 2002 Change _________________________________________________________________________ Traffic (RPMs millions) 2,734 3,713 -26.4% 14,561 16,963 -14.2% _________________________________________________________________________ Capacity (ASMs millions) 3,817 4,863 -21.5% 20,239 22,389 -9.6% _________________________________________________________________________ Load Factor 71.6% 76.4% -4.8pts 71.9% 75.8% -3.9 pts _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ RPMs 968 1,193 -18.9% 4,383 5,196 -15.6% Canada ______________________________________________________________ ASMs 1,390 1,601 -13.2% 6,229 6,859 -9.2% ______________________________________________________________ Load Factor 69.6% 74.5% -4.9pts 70.4% 75.8% -5.4 pts _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ RPMs 464 591 -21.5% 3,104 3,399 -8.7% U.S. ______________________________________________________________ Trans- ASMs 750 948 -20.9% 4,749 5,169 -8.1% border ______________________________________________________________ Load Factor 61.9% 62.3% -0.4pts 65.4% 65.8% -0.4 pts _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ RPMs 903 1,019 -11.4% 3,800 4,105 -7.4% Atlantic ______________________________________________________________ ASMs 1,071 1,174 -8.8% 4,748 4,978 -4.6% ______________________________________________________________ Load Factor 84.3% 86.8% -2.5pts 80.0% 82.5% -2.5 pts _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ RPMs 231 726 -68.2% 1,967 2,974 -33.9% Pacific ______________________________________________________________ ASMs 375 879 -57.3% 2,785 3,591 -22.4% ______________________________________________________________ Load Factor 61.6% 82.6% -21.0pts 70.6% 82.8% -12.2 pts _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ RPMs 168 184 -8.7% 1,307 1,289 +1.4% Other & ______________________________________________________________ Charter ASMs 231 261 -11.5% 1,728 1,792 -3.6% ______________________________________________________________ Load Factor 72.7% 70.5% +2.2pts 75.6% 71.9% +3.7 pts _________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ AIR CANADA REGIONAL (Jazz) _________________________________________________________________________ MAY YEAR-TO-DATE _________________________________________________________________________ 2003 2002 Change 2003 2002 Change _________________________________________________________________________ Traffic (RPMs millions) 134 148 -9.5% 637 641 -0.6% _________________________________________________________________________ Capacity (ASMs millions) 221 270 -18.1% 1,080 1,183 -8.7% _________________________________________________________________________ Load Factor 60.6% 54.8% +5.8 pts 59.0% 54.2% +4.8pts _________________________________________________________________________ >> *************************************************** The owner of Roger's Trinbago Site/TnTisland.com Roj (Roger James) escape email mailto:ejames@xxxxxxxxx Trinbago site: www.tntisland.com Carib Brass Ctn site www.tntisland.com/caribbeanbrassconnection/ Steel Expressions www.mts.net/~ejames/se/ Mas Site: www.tntisland.com/tntrecords/mas2003/ Site of the Week: http://www.natalielaughlin.com/ TnT Webdirectory: http://search.co.tt *********************************************************