Medical and Hospital News  
AEROSPACE
Singapore Airlines to set up new low-cost carrier

by Staff Writers
Singapore (AFP) May 25, 2011
Singapore Airlines (SIA) said Wednesday it will launch within one year a new budget airline using wide-body aircraft to tap into growing consumer demand for low-cost travel over longer distances.

SIA already runs a short-haul mid-price airline called SilkAir and owns 32.9 percent of budget carrier Tiger Airways but said it decided to establish the new subsidiary after "an extensive review and analysis" of the market.

It did not give a name for the future airline, saying more details will be announced "in due course" including its branding, services and routes.

"Operations are expected to begin within one year. The airline will be wholly owned by Singapore Airlines, but will be operated independently and managed separately from SIA," the company said in a press statement.

SIA said the new carrier will "enable the airline to serve a largely untapped new market and cater to the growing demand among consumers for low-fare travel."

The move will put the new carrier in competition with AirAsia X, the long-haul affiliate of Malaysian budget carrier AirAsia and British tycoon Richard Branson's Virgin Group.

Unlike most other budget airlines using single-aisle planes for short hops, the new carrier will operate widebody, double-aisle aircraft to ply medium- and long-haul routes.

"We are seeing a new market segment being created and this will provide another growth opportunity for the SIA Group," SIA chief executive Goh Choon Phong said.

"As we have observed on short-haul routes within Asia, low-fare airlines help stimulate demand for travel, and we expect this will also prove true for longer flights."

Shukor Yusof, an aviation analyst with Standard and Poor's Equities Research, said SIA was making a foray into a largely untapped market, which is dominated in the region by AirAsia X.

AirAsiaX flies to 14 destinations -- London, Taipei, Tehran, Paris, Seoul, Tokyo, China (Tianjin, Hangzhou, Chengdu), Australia (Gold Coast, Melbourne, Perth) and India (Mumbai, Delhi).

"If you look around, there's only AirAsia X in this region that's doing low-cost long-haul or medium- to long-haul flights. So essentially there's an opportunity to make money," Shukor told AFP.

"If you look at the recent financial year you can see that they (SIA) obviously need another avenue to grow their business."

SIA said on May 12 that full-year net profit rebounded strongly from the global recession as travel demand recovered.

It earned Sg$1.09 billion ($873 million) in the financial year ended March 31, up fivefold from Sg$216 million a year ago while revenues rose 14 percent to Sg$14.5 billion.

SIA cautioned that the near-term outlook was expected to be difficult due to surging oil prices, concerns over the US economy, the impact from Japan's quake-tsunami disasters and worries over Europe's sovereign debt crisis.

Shukor expects the new SIA subsidiary to be position itself higher than Tiger Airways.

SIA is "putting the expertise and the money behind this new entity and I have every reason to believe that it's going to be an exceptional airline," he added.

Shukor noted that AirAsia X was "doing quite well" flying to Europe, Northeast Asia and Australia and this may have triggered SIA to decide about launching a competitor.

SIA's announcement also came after a report in the Australian Financial Review that Australian airline Qantas was planning to establish a new premium carrier based in Singapore.

Qantas would not confirm the report, dismissing it as speculation, but has said its international business had not been performing to expectations, with market share in this area falling in recent years.

SIA shares were closed unchanged at Sg$14.20 on Wednesday before the announcement.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Aerospace News at SpaceMart.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


AEROSPACE
Volcano cloud briefly closes north German airspace
Berlin (AFP) May 25, 2011
An ash cloud from Iceland briefly forced the closure of several north German airports on Wednesday, including Hamburg and Berlin, even as the Grimsvoetn volcano appeared to stop erupting. The cloud is the second from an Icelandic volcano in barely a year to disrupt European air traffic and air traffic controllers said some 450 flights were cancelled over Germany on Wednesday. The Brussel ... read more







AEROSPACE
Japan's TEPCO admits further reactor meltdowns

Japan's TEPCO admits further reactor meltdowns

Malaysia probes rural town after deadly landslide

UN atomic watchdog experts arrive in Japan

AEROSPACE
Galileo: Europe prepares for October launch

EU announces launch date for first Galileo satellites

Europe's first EGNOS airport to guide down giant Beluga aircraft

'Green' GPS saves fuel, energy

AEROSPACE
Standing up to fight

Most common form of inherited intellectual disability may be treatable

The roots of memory impairment resulting from sleep deprivation

Clubbers can smell a good nightspot

AEROSPACE
Oceanic land crab extinction and the colonization of Hawaii

Spiders suffer from human impact

The dance of the cells is a minuet or a mosh

Of moose and men

AEROSPACE
Avian flu spreads in S.Africa despite ostrich slaughter

Sandia unlocks secrets of plague with stunning new imaging techniques

No evidence WHO in cahoots with vaccine makers: members

Health: Global Fund faces billion-dollar gap

AEROSPACE
China police allege Ai Weiwei firm evaded tax

Tibetan leader to India: make Tibet 'core' issue

China says 'door open' for Dalai Lama's return

In China, some new cities are ghost towns

AEROSPACE
US Navy recruits gamers to help in piracy strategy

Danish crew free Somali pirate hostages

Cargo ship, China crew rescued from pirates

Pirates seize Chinese-crewed cargo ship: Xinhua

AEROSPACE
Crisis stalks stage of 4.2% global growth, OECD warns

Crisis, stagflation stalk global recovery: OECD

Kan says rebirth of Japanese economy underway

Shunned by banks, small China firms hit pawn shops


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement