RE: Which way?Buying opportunity IMO. AMA is involved with a sector that is still growing. They can't keep up with the orders - nice position to be in. Banks lend money based on receivables so all this talk by the dooms-day duo (who only post on AMA but have no investment in AMA) that AMA will have financial difficulties is silly. I am glad the AMA longs take the time to keep the information flowing. China is busy getting their house in order but it looks like they have $$$$. inves20 - throw out the TA, pick your bottom and hold on for the good news. Cheers
Air China Says Domestic Traffic May Grow 10% in 2009 (Update2)
By Tian Ying
Oct. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Air China Ltd., facing its first drop in full-year domestic traffic since 2003, forecast an increase of as much as 10 percent next year as the nation's growth shields the carrier from a global economic slowdown.
``The demand for air travel in China is still out there,'' Board Secretary Huang Bin said in an interview in Beijing yesterday. ``We are concerned about the current situation, but we still have the ability to cope with it.''
Air China, the country's largest carrier by market value, hasn't pared routes or expansion plans and it also expects continued access to financing from Chinese banks even as the credit crisis tightens lending worldwide. This year, domestic traffic slipped 2.8 percent in the first eight months as natural disasters and the Olympics disrupted travel.
``If the industry rebounds to a normal level next year, Air China will be able to boost domestic passenger traffic,'' said Li Lei, an analyst at China Securities Co. in Beijing.
Air China posted the largest monthly fall in passenger numbers in more than five years in August after the government restricted travel for the August Olympics in the capital city. The carrier suspended 60 daily flights during the games as Beijing's airport focused on charter services carrying athletes.
Rival China Eastern Airlines Corp. predicted a nine-month loss, compared with a year-earlier profit, because of a ``dramatic decrease'' in travel demand.
Air China rose 7.9 percent, the most in more than a month, to HK$3.29 in Hong Kong trading today. The shares have dropped 72 percent this year.
U.S. Routes
The financial crisis has not hurt demand from the U.S., with flights filled to as much as 90 percent capacity, Huang said. The airline expects cargo demand to the U.S. may decline as a recession in the world's largest economy cuts imports, though it has not yet seen a drop-off, he said.
In September, China's trade surplus widened to a record as exports surged 21.5 percent. Export growth to the U.S. slowed by 4.6 percentage points from a year earlier to 11.2 percent in the first nine months, the customs bureau said yesterday.
Air China's domestic passenger traffic growth has slowed from 10.6 percent in 2007. It rose 32 percent in 2004. China's rising investments in other countries are also stimulating business travel, Huang said.
In the first half of the year, net income dropped 21 percent to 1.24 billion yuan ($182 million) as the company paid 32 percent more for jet fuel in the period.
Global carriers may post a combined loss of as much as $6.1 billion this year, the International Air Transport Association said in June. The group, whose members account for 93 percent of international airline traffic, forecasted a $4.5 billion profit in April.
To contact the reporter on this story: Tian Ying in Beijing on ytian@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 14, 2008 06:38 EDT