Malaysia Airlines is out of intensive care. Now it is working on long-term rehabilitation.
Two years ago this week, disaster struck when Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 vanished, leaving the company reeling from a crisis magnified months later by the downing of a second Boeing 777 over Ukraine.
Shunned by travelers and already ailing from years of mismanagement that saddled it with at least US$1.7 billion in losses since 2011, the Southeast Asian airline teetered on the edge of bankruptcy, forcing its government owners to carry out radical restructuring.
New chief executive officer Christoph Mueller, a turnaround veteran, has been scaling back or cutting unprofitable routes, grounding jets and axing 6,000 workers from a bloated workforce as part of a US$1.7 billion overhaul aimed at returning the carrier to profitability as early as next year.
However, analysts said the strategy of shrinking to survive makes Malaysia vulnerable to fierce competition from the budget carriers proliferating to serve Asia’s booming, travel-hungry middle class consumers. Competitors include homegrown rival Malaysia AirAsia as well as Indonesia’s Lion Air, Singapore’s Tigerair and Scoot and Qantas offshoot Jetstar.
Mueller made his biggest move yet in December last year, unveiling a strategic alliance with Emirates that allows Malaysia Airlines to piggyback onto more than 90 of the Gulf carrier’s global routes as it shrinks its own network to focus on Asia.
The deal with Emirates, one of the world’s largest airlines by seat capacity, was “definitely a rabbit out of the hat,” Maybank Kim Eng Securities aviation analyst Mohshin Aziz said.
“Yet they made it happen. For me, that’s definitely a solid foundation for their future survival,” he added.
Mohshin credits Mueller, a German and the first foreigner to lead the airline, with making tough changes avoided by predecessors.
However, aviation research firm Endau Analytics founder Shukor Yusof said Mueller’s strategy was too focused on short-term gains.
“They have taken the easy way out,” said Shukor, who was also part of a group whose offer to buy some of the airline’s assets to start a budget carrier was rebuffed.
Sweeping cuts are “the quickest way to eliminate cost, but long-term I don’t think it presents an opportunity to really strengthen or ... overhaul the fundamental issues of the company,” which include a history of interference from its owner, the sovereign investment fund Khazanah Nasional Berhad, Shukor said.
Mueller carried out a successful, but tough, revamp of Ireland’s Aer Lingus that earned him the nickname “The Terminator” because of comparisons with Arnold Schwarzenegger’s cyborg hitman.
Aiming to help Malaysia Airlines re-emerge as Southeast Asia’s leading carrier, since he took charge in May last year, he has led renegotiations of supply contracts and aircraft leasing deals, brought in new senior executives with budget airline experience and introduced state of the art German cost-management software meant to cut ground operations costs by 20 percent.
To attract more passengers, the airline is updating inflight menus and rolling out new services like on-board Wi-Fi and a new lie-flat seat in business class on some aircraft.
Malaysia’s already skeletal network outside Asia has been scaled back further. Paris and Amsterdam routes were scrapped in January as part of a broader withdrawal from international markets that started before the crisis struck. London and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, are now its only non-Asia-Pacific destinations, though passengers can buy code-share flights transiting through Emirates’ Dubai hub.
The airline is adjusting its fleet to cut costs and accommodate the route revamp, phasing out older Boeing 777s and fuel-hungry Airbus A380s and scaling back on smaller Boeing 737s. The airline has ordered four A350s, Airbus’ latest and most advanced airliner.
Tumbling oil prices have helped cut fuel costs, though the gains were partially eroded by the US dollar’s recent rise against the ringgit.
Shukor questions whether the airline can or even should survive in the long run.
Travelers are now better served by discount juggernaut AirAsia, which flies to more places and makes more money. Doubts persist over whether the government-backed carrier serves Malaysia’s long-term interests.
“The question that needs to be asked is does Malaysia need Malaysia Airlines now?” Shukor said. “If Malaysia Airlines were to shut down tomorrow there won’t be many people who would feel the absence.”
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