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Air NZ sees big opportunities in Pac Rim

written by australianaviation.com.au | May 23, 2014

Christopher Luxon speaks at the TTF Outlook conference on Friday. (Scott Ehler/TTF)
Christopher Luxon speaks at the TTF Outlook conference on Friday. (Scott Ehler/TTF)

Using geography as an excuse for poor performance is like a child saying the dog ate my homework – it just does not stand up.

So says Air New Zealand chief executive Christopher Luxon, who believes the Kiwi flag carrier’s location is far from a hinderance to operating a profitable airline.

Rather, the Pacific Rim represented a huge opportunity for Air NZ, given the massive rise of the middle class in countries such as China and India.

“I think this whole ‘end of the line’ thing is ‘the dog ate my homework’ excuse sort of in this part of the world really to be brutally honest,” Luxon told the Tourism Transport Forum’s Outlook conference in Sydney on Friday.

“We genuinely sit there, sitting in Australasia, saying ‘there is massive opportunity in that Pacific Rim’.”

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Air NZ is forecasting sales growth of between five and seven per cent a year over the next five years alongside a three per cent reduction in costs, Luxon said.

It plans to spend NZ$2 billion taking delivery of 22 new aircraft over the next three years, is building new airport lounges in Sydney and Auckland, as well as developing new markets alongside alliance partners such as Virgin Australia, Cathay Pacific and Singapore Airlines.

The company reported a net profit of $NZ140 million for the six months to December 31 2013, up 40 per cent from the prior corresponding period.

Luxon said Air NZ’s investment in Virgin Australia – the carrier is Virgin’s largest shareholder at 24.46 per cent behind Singapore Airlines (22.17 per cent) and Etihad Airways (21.24 per cent) – was part of being a “Pacific Rim player”.

“We want to have strength and relevance within that region and we want our assets exposed to a portfolio of markets across that region,” he said.

Luxon said the transformation of Virgin under chief executive John Borghetti had delivered a lot more choice in the “large, adjacent and growing” Australian domestic market

“We are very big fans of the strategy.”

Luxon said the alliance between Virgin and Air NZ, which began in 2011, represented about 55 per cent of the trans-Tasman market.

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Comments (3)

  • Stuart Lawrence

    says:

    What about Virgin australia flying to san francisco or vancover

  • Reverend

    says:

    ide like to see air NZ fly from Auckland to Buenos Airres and codeshare Aerolineas argentinas to Brazil and other countries

  • Arcanum

    says:

    Vancouver might be interesting if you could get Air Canada to codeshare with Virgin the way they do with Air New Zealand, although I’m not sure AC is progressive enough for that kind of thinking. Of course, there’s speculation AC will be starting YVR-MEL or YVR-BNE once enough 787s arrive, so they may not be interested in joining up with Virgin. SFO might be good if there were codeshares with Virgin America.

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