Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways is gearing up for a possible preliminary public providing after growing income in 2023 on the again of a 40% enhance in passenger numbers.
Requested a couple of potential itemizing, Etihad Airways Group CEO Antonoaldo Neves informed CNBC on Tuesday, “I’m working to be ready, whenever it’s the time.”
Discuss of an IPO has been swirling after it was reported that ADQ, the Abu Dhabi-based funding firm that owns Etihad Airways, was in discussions with banks about going public as quickly as this yr.
“It’s not for me to confirm the shareholder decisions,” Neves mentioned, whereas additionally signaling efforts to organize the airline. “It’s our obligation to be ready to IPO the company whenever the shareholder believes it is the right time… and this is good, even if you don’t do it.”
If it materializes, an IPO would allow Etihad to faucet capital markets to fund future development and growth plans. It will additionally make it the primary main Gulf service to develop into publicly traded, after years of hypothesis surrounding the itemizing of Dubai-based rival Emirates.
“We’re working very hard, so that our governance is top notch… so that profitability is at the level that the shareholder can decide to IPO or not to IPO,” Neves mentioned, including that “management are putting a lot of effort in place so that the company can be compared to any other company that is listed.”
Since becoming a member of the airline in 2022, Neves has restricted losses and invested within the buyer expertise after Etihad’s possession switch to ADQ throughout the Covid-19 pandemic. The funding firm has already launched a variety of high-profile IPOs in recent times, together with Abu Dhabi Ports and Pure Well being.
ADQ declined to remark about potential itemizing plans.
Neves has beforehand led value slicing and fleet upgrades at Portuguese nationwide airline TAP and introduced Azul Airways public in New York in 2017. Etihad’s CFO Raffael Quintas additionally served as CFO of TAP and as company treasurer at Azul.
An inventory would mark a big step for Etihad and regional capital markets, however stays a hefty hurdle. Going public would topic the airline to stricter monetary reporting and disclosure necessities, extra compliance prices and market stress surrounding efficiency targets.
Bettering transparency
Etihad on Wednesday reported it achieved an working revenue of $394 million in 2023, pushed by a surge in passenger numbers to 14 million final yr. The corporate launched 15 locations and added 14 new aircrafts within the interval, on the again of ongoing restoration in post-Covid-19 demand.
Complete income was $5.5 billion in 2023, up from $5 billion within the earlier yr. Web revenue was simply $143 million. Whereas the determine is modest in comparison with business giants, Neves mentioned he was optimistic about Etihad’s means to develop margins and profitability, regardless of a difficult geopolitical backdrop and better value atmosphere.
The airline expects income development of 25-30% this yr and is focusing on between $100 to $150 million in value cuts, however did not provide steering on revenue estimates.
“I think we can do better,” Neves mentioned.
Boeing Issues
Neves additionally sought to reassure the flying public about Etihad’s Boeing fleet after a door blowout on a Boeing 737-Max 9 plane. He mentioned Etihad doesn’t fly the plane in query, however it’s a important Boeing 787 wide-body buyer
“We really trust the 787. It’s a safe plane. It’s an amazing machine. It’s one of the best machines flying today. The safety record is good. The operating standards are good. We’re very confident about the 787 program,” Neves mentioned.
He however expressed concern that the scenario at Boeing might exacerbate delays and provide chain points that would influence the airline.
“You cannot delay planes… and that goes for Airbus as well,” Neves mentioned. “Delays after delays after delays – we live today in a world where an aircraft has become a scarce resource … The only way tickets are going to go down is if we have more aircraft, so that will deploy more capacity.”
He added, “The reality is there is untapped demand in the market.”