
Japan Airlines airplanes are seen at Haneda Airport in December 2020.
8:30 JST, May 3, 2023
TOKYO (AFP-Jiji) — Japan Airlines logged Tuesday an annual net profit for the first time in three years, buoyed by soaring domestic and international demand for travel after pandemic restrictions were eased.
The carrier, Japan’s second-largest by market share, said net profit for the year to March was ¥34.4 billion — a turnaround from a net loss of ¥177 billion in the previous financial year.
“Air passenger demand recovered steadily as the shift toward balancing the COVID-19 pandemic’s prevention and socioeconomic activities gained momentum,” a company statement said.
JAL’s results were last in the black in the year to March 2020, just before COVID-19 began to cause global chaos.
Business was clobbered by the pandemic and in 2020-21 JAL suffered an annual net loss of ¥287 billion, its first full-year result in the red since it relisted on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in 2012.
On Tuesday, the carrier attributed its return to profitability in part to “comprehensive cost-cutting efforts and maximizing sales in the cargo business domain.”
The airline’s rival ANA Holdings similarly said last week that it achieved profitability for the first time in three years, logging a full-year net profit of ¥89 billion.
Top Articles in News Services
-
Survey Shows False Election Info Perceived as True
-
Prudential Life Expected to Face Inspection over Fraud
-
Hong Kong Ex-Publisher Jimmy Lai’s Sentence Raises International Outcry as China Defends It
-
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average Touches 58,000 as Yen, Jgbs Rally on Election Fallout (UPDATE 1)
-
Trump Names Former Federal Reserve Governor Warsh as the Next Fed Chair, Replacing Powell
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Japan PM Takaichi’s Cabinet Resigns en Masse
-
Japan Institute to Use Domestic Commercial Optical Lattice Clock to Set Japan Standard Time
-
Israeli Ambassador to Japan Speaks about Japan’s Role in the Reconstruction of Gaza
-
Man Infected with Measles Reportedly Dined at Restaurant in Tokyo Station
-
Videos Plagiarized, Reposted with False Subtitles Claiming ‘Ryukyu Belongs to China’; Anti-China False Information Also Posted in Japan

