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Turkish Airlines: the taxman cometh, but cost control drives 2Q operating profit growth

Analysis

Turkish Airlines once again grew its operating profit in 1H2013 and 2Q2013 and continued its double digit growth in traffic and revenues. However, its net result fell as a result of foreign currency movements and a higher tax bill. Foreign exchange markets and the taxman are non-operating items and should even out over time, but the improved underlying profits demonstrate the success of its transfer traffic-driven growth strategy.

One cause for concern in the operating result is that the first quarter's growth in revenue per available seat kilometre turned into a decline in the second quarter. Only good cost control, which saw 2Q unit costs fall more than unit revenues, enabled the continued growth in operating profit. Unit revenues can fluctuate with market conditions, but the ability to keep CASK growth below RASK growth is one of the key skills for any airline management.

Operating profit grows, net profit falls in 1H2013

In 1H2013, Turkish Airlines (THY) saw its net profit fall by 29% to TRY121 million (USD67 million), in spite of a 192% increase in its operating profit to TRY439 million (USD243 million). This discrepancy is due to higher net financial expenses (mainly due to adverse foreign exchange movements in the value of debt) and a higher tax charge than last year.

The improved operating profit was the result of revenue growth outstripping cost growth. Revenues grew by 23% to TRY8,234 million (USD4,552 million), with ASKs up 21%, while operating costs grew by 19%. RASK was up 1.6% and CASK fell by 1.6%.

Turkish Airlines results highlights: 1H2013

1H2012 1H2013 Change
Revenue TRY million 6,682 8,234 23.2%
Operating profit TRY million 150 439 192.1%
Operating margin % 2.2 5.3 3.1
Net profit TRY million 172 121 -29.4%
ASK million 44,594 54,097 21.3%
RPK million 33,657 42,688 26.8%
Load factor 75.5 78.9 3.4
RASK kurus 14.98 15.22 1.6%
CASK kurus 14.78 14.55 -1.6%
CASK ex fuel kurus 9.28 9.19 -1.0%
Employees 17,391 19,965 14.8%

Dividing the half into two quarters

Looking at the half year divided into its two quarters, 1Q2013 saw losses narrow at both the operating and net level, while 2Q2013 saw operating profit grow and net profit fall (see table below). The weak 2Q net profit, which was around half the figure forecast by analysts (source: Bloomberg), was affected by the currency movements noted above.

In 1Q2013, RASK growth of 5.3% outstripped CASK growth of 0.5%, while in 2Q2013, the RASK decline of 1.2% was less than the CASK decline of 3.4%. The 2Q2013 result was helped by a fall in fuel cost per ASK.

In spite of similar rates of ASK growth in both quarters, revenue growth of 28% in 1Q slowed to 20% in 2Q. CEO Temel Kotil has bee reported as saying that he expects sales growth of around 28% in 2013 (wiwo.de, 17-Aug-2013).

Turkish Airlines results highlights: 1Q2013 and 2Q2013

1Q2012 1Q2013 Change
1Q2013
vs 1Q2012
2Q2012 2Q2013 Change
2Q2013
vs 2Q2012
Revenue TRY million 2,841 3,629 27.7% 3,840 4,605 19.9%
Operating profit TRY million -173 -23 -86.9% 323 461 42.9%
Operating margin % -6.1 -0.6 5.5 8.4 10.0 1.6
Net profit TRY million -29 -22 -24.0% 201 144 -28.6%
ASK million 20,613 25,003 21.3% 23,981 29,094 21.3%
RPK million 15,017 19,485 29.8% 18,640 23,203 24.5%
Load factor 72.9 77.9 5.0 77.7 79.8 2.0
RASK kurus 13.78 14.51 5.3% 16.01 15.83 -1.2%
CASK kurus 14.77 14.85 0.5% 14.79 14.29 -3.4%
CASK ex fuel kurus 9.47 9.34 -1.4% 9.11 9.05 -0.6%
Employees 17,684 18,689 5.7% -293 1,276 -535.5%

Passenger traffic measures continue growth in excess of 20%

In 1H2013, THY saw further strong growth in scheduled passenger traffic, with ASKs up 21%, RPKs up 27% and passenger numbers up 26%. Passenger load factor gained 3.4 ppts to 78.9%. Total distance flown grew by 29%, while the number of landings grew by 23%, reflecting growth in average sector length in accordance with THY's international expansion.

Turkish Airlines traffic data: 1H2013

By region, the strongest growth in passenger traffic was to South America, which saw passenger numbers almost double, thanks in part to a 13.8ppt increase in load factor. Africa and Europe also saw growth rates higher than the network average for the carrier. THY's strong international growth reflects its strategy of using its Istanbul hub to connect global traffic flows.

See related reports:

Turkish Airlines traffic data by region: Jan to Jul-2013

THY's strong growth has seen it continue to increase its share of AEA passenger traffic. In 1H2013, it carried 12.4% of all AEA airline passengers and 10% of ASKs and RPKs. These figures compare with 4.8% of passengers, 3.7% of ASKs and 3.3% of RPKs in 2006 and made THY the AEA's third biggest carrier by passenger numbers in 1H2013.

Turkish Airlines market share by ASK, RPK and passengers among AEA member airlines: 2006 to 1H2013

In line with longer sector length, THY also saw an increase average daily utilisation of its aircraft in 1H2013 to 12.4 hours, up from 12.1 hours in 1H2012. Both the widebody fleet and the narrowbody fleet improved their utilisation.

Turkish Airlines average daily aircraft utilisation (hours): 2007 to 1H2013

Revenues up 23%

Revenue growth of 23% for the half year, faster than growth in ASKs, was driven by scheduled passenger revenues, which accounted for 86% of the total. Cargo revenues grew at a slower rate of 19%, but this was faster than the 15% growth in freight tonnes carried.

Turkish Airlines revenue by activity: 1H2013

TRY million

1H2012

1H2013

Change

% of 1H2013 total

Scheduled passenger revenue

5682

7049

24%

86%

Cargo

583

692

19%

8%

Charter

47

47

-2%

1%

Other

369

446

21%

5%

Total revenue

6682

8233

23%

100%

Geographically, THY's strongest revenue growth in 1H2013 came from Africa (+37%) and Europe (+28%), outpacing ASK growth in each region (34% and 24% respectively). Revenues in the Americas were up by 23%, compared with ASK growth of 22% (North and South America combined). Revenue growth to the Far East of 16% lagged the other regions, but also outpaced ASK growth to the region (12%).

Turkish Airlines scheduled flight revenue by region: 1H2013

TRY million

1H2012

1H2013

Change

% of 1H2013 total

Europe

1971

2517

28%

33%

Far East

1446

1678

16%

22%

Middle East

853

1050

23%

14%

America

621

766

23%

10%

Africa

464

634

37%

8%

Total international

5355

6644

24%

86%

Domestic

910

1097

21%

14%

Total scheduled flight revenue

6265

7741

24%

100%

Only in the domestic market did THY see revenue growth fall behind ASK growth (21% versus 22%). This may reflect growing competition from LCC Pegasus Airlines.

See related report: Pegasus Airlines: strong 2Q2013 earnings growth for the 'low-cost network carrier'

Costs up 19%

Growth in operating costs was 19%, slower than the growth in revenues and ASKs for 1H2013. The biggest cost item, fuel (37% of the total), grew by only 18%. Costs excluding fuel grew by 20%, although the second biggest item, labour costs (18% of the total) grew by only 12%, which was slower than the 15% growth in employee numbers.

The year-on-year growth in costs slowed from 22% in 1Q to 17% in 2Q, in spite of similar ASK growth rates of 21% in both quarters. Excluding fuel, cost growth was similar in both quarters, at 20% and 21% respectively. CASK ex fuel saw modest declines in both quarters (-1.4% and -0.6% respectively). 2Q's weaker revenue growth relative to 1Q may reflect a lessening of the extent to which THY used ticket prices to cover fuel costs. Mr Kotil's plans to raise ticket prices by 5%, reported in wiwo.de (17-Aug-2013), suggest that RASK performance may adjust upwards once more in 2H2013.

Turkish Airlines operating expenses (TRY million): 1H2013

Currency profiles of revenues and expenses do not match

THY's operating result is potentially exposed to changes in foreign exchange rates. In particular, it has a long position in euros (revenues greater than costs), which means that a weakening of the euro has a negative impact, and a short position in USD and TRY (revenues less than costs), which means that a strengthening of the dollar and lira have a negative P&L impact.

In order to reduce these exposures, THY hedges its USD and TRY needs on a rolling 24 month horizon, with a hedging rate of 30% one month out, falling to 1% 24 months out.

Turkish Airlines revenue and expenses by currency: 1H2013

THY leads its peers… almost

Turkish Airlines recorded the highest 1H2013 EBITDAR margin, 16.1%, among the peers against which it chooses to compare itself. It certainly achieved a better margin than the major legacy flag carrier groups in Europe (see chart below), but Turkish LCC Pegasus Airlines achieved an EBITDAR margin of 20.4% in 1H2013. While their business models and target markets may differ, the experience of other European legacy carriers shows that airlines ignore LCC competitors at their peril. Moreover, for the 2012 financial year, its EBITDAR margin of 17.6% was less than that of Emirates' 19.0%. The latter is an important benchmark and competitor with respect to THY's transfer traffic strategy.

EBITDAR margin for Turkish Airlines and selected other airlines: 1H2013

Similarly, THY rightly claims superiority in labour productivity and CASK compared with what it considers its peer group of competitors. It had a higher level of passengers per employee in 2012 than a number of major European, US, Middle East and Asian carriers, although this is not always the most appropriate measure of labour productivity due to differences in the short-haul/long-haul mix.

CAPA's study of labour productivity among European airlines in 2012 showed that THY has the most productive workforce among legacy flag carriers in Europe, but most European LCCs rank higher.

See related report: European airline labour productivity: CAPA rankings

Passengers per employee: 2012

Cost per ASK (US cent): 1H2013

CAPA's analysis also confirms that THY has the lowest CASK among European FSCs, but, adjusting for average sector length, its cost base is higher than those of European LCCs and significantly higher than Pegasus'.

Cost per available seat kilometre (CASK, USc) versus average sector length (km): 2012

Orders for 268 aircraft

Turkish Airlines intends to maintain strong growth and plans to grow its fleet accordingly. Substantial orders for narrowbody aircraft from both Airbus and Boeing, announced in Mar-2013 and Apr-2013 respectively mean that THY had an outstanding order book of 268 aircraft (227 narrowbody) as of Jul-2013, when its fleet stood at 230 aircraft (see chart below).

This includes the recent conversion of options for three A330-300 aircraft to firm orders. THY is expected to place further long-haul orders and CEO Temel Kotil has said the airline is considering Boeing 777X and A350-1000 aircraft.

At 27-Aug-2013, the total fleet consisted of 232 aircraft (182 narrowbody, 40 widebody, 10 cargo). Its current fleet plan sees the total growing to 423 in 2021.

Turkish Airlines fleet and projected development: as of Jul-2013

Turkish Airlines aircraft deliveries to 2021

Turkish Airlines' cost focus will need to be maintained

After it reported its 1Q2013 results, CAPA made the following observation about Turkish Airlines:

Its 1Q2013 results saw an increase in RASK and CASK held flat at last year's level, giving it a good start to the year.

Given planned FY2013 capacity growth of 20%, the RASK trend may be harder to maintain in the more competitive summer season. Although fuel prices have eased a little recently, the company cannot rely on this throughout the year and will need to maintain downward pressure on ex fuel unit costs.

See related report: Turkish Airlines 1Q revenues grow 28% as losses narrow but unit costs will be key to FY result

THY's 2Q2013 results have continued the trend improving operating profit and this resulted from unit costs falling faster than the drop in RASK. Planned ticket price increases may help to firm up RASK in the second half, but strong capacity growth, a growing focus on transfer traffic and price-based competition from Pegasus mean that RASK is likely to remain under pressure.

THY's creditable CASK performance in 2Q must be maintained.

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