(Reuters) -Qantas Airways reported a 16% decline in annual underlying revenue on Thursday, impacted by rising gas prices and decrease fares, at the same time as Australia’s flagship service introduced a further share buyback plan of as much as A$400 million ($271.36 million).
Rising gas costs and a return to regular journey capability have led to decrease fares, as passengers seek for extra budget-friendly journey choices, which has affected Qantas’ profitability.
General, earnings declined year-over-year resulting from normalized fare costs, elevated investments in customer-focused promotions, and a drop in freight earnings, notably in the course of the first six months of the yr.
The airline’s underlying revenue earlier than tax fell 16% from the prior yr to A$2.08 billion for fiscal yr ended June 30, in step with a Seen Alpha consensus of A$2.08 billion.
On a statutory foundation, revenue after tax attributable decreased by 28.1% from the prior yr to A$1.25 billion.
Qantas didn’t declare a closing dividend, persevering with its five-year dividend drought that started in 2019.
Nonetheless, the corporate introduced an A$400 million share buyback program to distribute extra capital, citing the fulfilment of all standards inside its monetary framework.
($1 = 1.4741 Australian {dollars})