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By Steven Rothwell March 11 (Bloomberg) — Airlines worldwide will lose a collective $2.8 billion in 2010, half the previous forecast, as emerging markets lead a rebound in traffic, the International Air Transport Association said. The loss estimate was cut from $5.6 billion after a “much stronger recovery in demand” at the end of 2009 that continued into the first months of this year, the Geneva, Switzerland- based association said in a statement today. Losses last year probably amounted to $9.4 billion rather than the $11 billion previously estimated, IATA said. Traffic will increase about 5.6 percent in 2010, with the recovery in western markets lagging behind growth in emerging economies. “We are seeing a definite two-speed industry,” IATA Chief Executive Officer Giovanni Bisignani said on a conference call. “Asia and Latin America are driving the recovery. The weakest international markets are the North Atlantic and intra-Europe, which have continuously contracted since mid-2008.” Earnings are picking up after the industry reined in capacity, allowing airlines to lift average fares and boost revenue as demand increases, Bisignani said. Yields — a measure of ticket prices — should gain 2 percent this year following a 14 percent decline in 2009, he said. Investor Optimism Investors in the U.S. industry, which includes Delta Air Lines Inc. and AMR Corp.’s American Airlines , the world’s largest carriers, are betting that the worst is past. The Bloomberg U.S. Airlines Index rose 18 percent this year through yesterday, compared with gains of 7.1 percent and 1 percent for gauges of Asia-Pacific and European carriers. By region, European carriers probably will suffer the biggest loss, at $2.2 billion, followed by North American airlines at $1.8 billion on concern that job losses will be a drag on consumer spending, IATA said. Asia-Pacific carriers are projected to post a $900 million profit as China drives growth, reversing a $2.7 billion loss in 2009. Latin American operators may earn $800 million, matching last year’s performance, according to the trade group. IATA said airlines’ cuts in seating capacity helped them fly fuller planes, with the average load factor on international flights reaching 75.9 percent in January. Revenue Shortfall Global industry revenue is likely to be $552 billion this year, $43 billion more than in 2009, Bisignani said. That’s still $42 billion less than the peak in 2008. “We can be optimistic, but with due caution,” he said. “Important risks remain. Oil is a wild-card, over-capacity is still a danger, and costs must be kept under control throughout the value chain and with labor.” IATA raised its forecast for the average price of oil this year to $79 a barrel from $75 and now estimates fuel will make up 26 percent of operating costs, versus 24 percent in 2009. There remains a danger that crude prices will outpace economic growth, making it tough for airlines to pass the cost to passengers in the form of surcharges, Bisignani said. A surge in fuel prices two years ago began a crisis that deepened as demand for travel tumbled in the credit crisis and global recession, resulting in the collapse of 34 airlines since 2008. The industry has lost $50 billion in the past 10 years, with last year’s drop in passenger demand the worst since World War II, IATA said on Jan. 27. The slump pushed carriers including British Airways Plc and Singapore Airlines Ltd. into losses and forced Japan Airlines Corp. to file for bankruptcy. Cargo demand is expected to increase 12 percent worldwide, IATA said, better than the 7 percent previously forecast. Asian air-freight markets are particularly strong, with shipments originating there experiencing a capacity shortage. Lufthansa Outlook Deutsche Lufthansa AG, Europe’s second-biggest airline, said today that operating profit should increase this year following a 112 million-euro ($153 million) net loss in 2009. “No one can say how long it will take for us to make up for the current losses,” CEO Wolfgang Mayrhuber said in a statement. “A solid balance sheet, efficient capacity adjustments and the reduction of costs are, and will remain, the decisive factors for success.” Like European rival British Airways, the German carrier faces a possible strike as it seeks to restrain costs. With the rebound fragile, walkouts would likely hurt earnings, IATA said. “It’s certainly not the time for strikes,” Bisignani said. “The recovery will depend on everybody sharing the burden. We are moving in the right direction, but let’s remember the situation is still in the red.” To contact the reporter on this story: Steven Rothwell in London at srothwell@bloomberg.net

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Airline-Loss Estimate Cut 50% to $2.8 Billion as Industry Sees Travel Gain

By Maher Chmaytelli and Camilla Hall Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) — Saudi Arabian Finance Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf said the kingdom will continue to pump money to boost growth in 2010, even as the economy rebounds from last year’s stagnation. “At one point there will be a curbing of spending, but in my view 2010 is a year that needs continuous stimulus to the economy,” al-Assaf said today at the Global Competitiveness Forum, an [bn:URL= http://www.gcf.org.sa/ http://www.gcf.org.sa/ http://www.gcf.org.sa/ http://www.gcf.org.sa/] investors’ conference [] in the Saudi capital. Saudi Arabia expects growth of more than 4 percent in 2010, the finance minister said. The country’s economy expanded 0.15 percent in 2009, according to Ministry of Finance estimates. Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, is spending $400 billion on infrastructure over a five-year period starting from 2009 to stimulate the economy. Rising oil prices, which have rebounded to around $75 a barrel from less than $35 in February, are also likely to boost growth this year. “Stimulus packages shouldn’t be withdrawn prematurely, nor should they be extended more than required so as not to produce inflationary pressures,” al-Assaf said. To contact the reporters on this story: Maher Chmaytelli in Riyadh via the Dubai newsroom at 1029 or mchmaytelli@bloomberg.net Camilla Hall in Riyadh via the Dubai newsroom at chall24@bloomberg.net or

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Saudi Arabia Will Not End Stimulus This Year, Finance Minister Assaf Says

OPEC Agrees to Maintain Production Quotas as Oil Trades Above $71 a Barrel

September 9, 2009

By Fred Pals and Ayesha Daya, Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — OPEC said it will keep oil production quotas unchanged, banking on a recovery in the world economy to maintain prices near today’s $71 a barrel. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed to maintain total production quotas at 24.845 million barrels a day, and will urge members to adhere to their targets, OPEC Secretary-General Abdalla El-Badri in a press briefing. It’s the third time this year group has met without revising the figure. “Holding production was the prudent thing to do,” Jason Schenker , president of Texas-based consultancy Prestige Economics LLC, said in an interview in Vienna. The producer group, which accounts for about 40 percent of global crude supply, had been expected by analysts and most ministers to keep output unchanged after prices rallied. Oil has gained 61 percent this year, last month reaching the $75 level identified by Saudi King Abdullah as satisfactory for consumers and producers. Crude oil advanced for a fourth day. The contract for October delivery traded up 31 cents, or 0.4 percent, at $71.62 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange as of 1:52 a.m. Vienna time. “This $65 to $75 range seems amenable to both producers and consumers,” Schenker said. “If they’d cut when production is above quotas, and prices are amenable, it may not have been received well.” Three-Hour Talks Algerian Oil Minister Chakib Khelil and Qatari Energy Minister Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah confirmed the decision as they left OPEC’s headquarters at about 1 a.m. Vienna time today, after closed door talks lasting three hours. OPEC agreed late last year to cut production targets by 4.2 million barrels a day after prices crashed more than $100 a barrel from a record set in July 2008. Oil dipped to $32.40 in December before recovering this year. In the past five months, production has risen from the 11 OPEC members bound by quotas. The 11 members bound by quotas pumped 26.055 million barrels a day in August, according to estimates in a Bloomberg survey, which indicates quota compliance of about 71 percent. Compliance with existing production quotas is improving and prices may rise further by the end of the year, Algeria’s Khelil said. Late yesterday, Ali al-Naimi , the oil minister for Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s biggest producer, told reporters “we are enjoying a good, fair price” for oil, so any slippage in compliance with production quotas is not a concern while prices are “perfect.” Expected Result Ministers from several OPEC member states including Kuwait and Venezuela had said this week they didn’t expect any change in allowed production volumes. Quotas were last changed in December. All 26 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News last week also forecast no change in quotas. Only Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar pumped less than their target last month, according to Bloomberg estimates. Iran, Angola and Venezuela were the biggest quota busters. Iraq is the only OPEC member which does not have production limits. “Everybody should adhere to his production allocation,” OPEC’s el-Badri said. There are “positive signs” oil demand will pick up in 2010, he added. OPEC will meet next in Luanda, Angola, on Dec. 22, and again in Vienna on March 17 next year, the group said. To contact the reporters on this story: Fred Pals in Vienna at fpals@bloomberg.net . Ayesha Daya in Vienna at adaya1@bloomberg.net

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Ruble Falls in Longest Slump Since February on Record Drop in Russian GDP

August 11, 2009

By Denis Maternovsky Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) — The ruble weakened for a fifth day versus dollar, its longest losing streak since February, after a report showed Russia’s economy contracted by the most on record in the second quarter. The currency slipped 0.7 percent to 32.0191 per dollar in Moscow, the lowest intraday level since July 15. Gross domestic product contracted an annual 10.9 percent last quarter, the Federal Statistics Service said, more than analysts estimated. GDP expanded 7.5 percent from the previous quarter. Russia, the world’s largest energy supplier, is suffering its steepest economic slowdown in a decade as the worst global recession since World War II undermines demand for fuel. The country spent more than a third of its foreign-exchange reserves to help stem a 35 percent devaluation in the ruble from last August to January after crude dropped by more than $100 a barrel from a record in July 2008. “The ruble clearly lost some ground following the release of GDP figures,” said Luis Costa , emerging market strategist at Commerzbank AG in London. “That will reinforce central bank’s case for further easing on the refinancing rates.” Bank Rossii has slashed the key rate by 2.25 percentage points in four months, most recently by 25 basis points to 10.75 percent last week, in a bid to revive bank lending amid the seizure of global capital markets. The economy was forecast to shrink 10.2 percent in the second quarter, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of seven economists. The service’s data go as far back as 1995. Stocks Gain Russia’s 30-stock Micex Index rose 0.5 percent as oil advanced for the first time in four days. Crude for September delivery climbed as much as 62 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $71.22 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The ruble was 0.5 percent weaker versus the dollar at 31.9720 at 1:31 p.m. and lost 0.4 percent against the euro at 45.2806 per euro. Those movements left the ruble at 37.9573, headed for the weakest closing level since July 14, versus the target currency basket that the central bank manages to limit swings that hurt Russian exporters. The basket is calculated by multiplying the dollar’s rate to the ruble by 0.55, the euro to ruble rate by 0.45, then adding them together. The ruble remains within the 26 to 41 band the central bank pledged Jan. 22 to defend. Investors increased bets of a weaker ruble, with non- deliverable forwards showing the currency will weaken 2 percent to 32.67 per dollar in three months, from an NDF of 32.53 on Aug 10. The contracts are a guide to expectations about currency movements as they allow foreign investors and companies to fix the exchange rate at a particular level in the future. To contact the reporter on this story: Denis Maternovsky in Moscow at dmaternovsky@bloomberg.net

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