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Reviving Malaysia Airlines

Gabriel DomínguezAugust 29, 2014

Still reeling from two disasters within months, Malaysia plans to overhaul its national airline and reduce staff by about 30 percent. Experts agree that substantial changes are needed to set the carrier back on track.

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Malaysia Airlines
Image: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images

In a bid to stem financial losses and revive the ailing brand, Malaysia Airlines (MAS) majority investor Khazanah Nasional said on Friday, August 29, the flag carrier will reduce its staff from 20,000 to 14,000 as part of a RM6-billion (1.9 billion USD) restructuring plan.

The state investment fund, which currently owns 69 percent of the airline and is set to take full ownership, said the overhaul includes the establishment of a new company that will take over the existing MAS business and its reduced staff. It also added that carrier would be de-listed by the end of this year.

Khazanah plans to restore the airline to profitability by 2017 and re-list its shares on the stock exchange by the end of 2019. "We need to have a fresh start," said Khazanah Managing Director Azman Mokhtar in a statement.

As part of the overhaul, analysts also expect Khazanah to stop flying unprofitable routes to Europe and China, and replace top management. Ahmad Jauhari Yahya is set remain Chief Executive Officer (CEO) till July 2015 as the search for a new CEO has reportedly begun. There was no mention of any plans, however, to change the airline's name.

The news comes just one day as after the MAS posted a 305 million ringgit (97.5 million USD) loss in the April-June quarter, nearly double the net loss of 175.9 million ringgit the flag carrier registered in the same period a year earlier.

Passengers are ready to check in at a departure lobby at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang, Malaysia, Friday, Aug. 29, 2014.
Malaysia Airlines will cut its workforce by 6,000, with a new company taking over its operations, said the government fund Khazanah NasionalImage: picture alliance/AP Photo

The image of the flag carrier - known for its high quality service and good safety record - has been tainted by recent tragedies. The fate of MAS Flight MH370 has been shrouded in mystery ever since the Boeing 777 left Kuala Lumpur for Beijing in the early morning hours of March 8, with 239 people on board.

While satellite data suggest the aircraft crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, international search efforts have so far failed to provide any concrete evidence as to the fate of the plane. On July 17, 298 people were killed when MAS Flight MH17 was shot down while flying over rebel-held eastern Ukraine.

Change is 'inevitable'

For UK-based aviation safety consultant Chris Yates the plan to overhaul MAS doesn't come as a surprise and is long overdue: "Change is the inevitable consequence for an airline that has not only suffered the loss of two aircraft in the space of a few months, but has also been engaged in an uphill battle with lower cost and much leaner competitors for some time now."

Even before the disappearance of Flight MH370 the carrier had been wracking up significant losses - 1.31 billion USD in the period from 2011 to 2013 - as it faced rising competition from upstart budget carriers such as Malaysia's AirAsia.

However, the financial situation became much worse in 2014. The carrier suffered a first quarter net loss of 443 million Ringgit (130 million USD) following the disappearance of MH370, its biggest loss in two years. Yates therefore believes that Khazanah Nasional's decision to take full ownership of MAS buys it the time it badly needs to carry out the restructuring.

A Malaysia Airlines employee sits behind a closed ticket counter at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on July 20, 2014.
Experts say that some of the long-distance routes that have been unprofitable should be cutImage: Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Getty Images

Hamburg-based aviation expert Heinrich Grossbongardt explains that having a shareholder with deep enough pockets, who is not looking for short term profit and is committed to the airline for years to come, is essential for stabilizing MAS. The only risk associated with many state-owned investment companies is, however, that key decisions are driven by politics and not by economic facts and business needs, the analyst told DW.

The flag carrier

With 16 million passengers per year and a fleet of close to 100 aircraft, Malaysia Airlines - founded in 1947 - has been a mid-size player in international air traffic. But Mohshin Aziz, aviation analyst at the Kuala Lumpur-based Maybank Investment Bank, believes MAS is in dire need to scrap unprofitable flight routes: "MAS is a business after all and the main objective is to make money. Some of the routes stated have not been making money for a very long time, and it is envisioned that it probably never will make money given the extraordinary circumstances," said Aziz.

But the carrier's importance for the Southeast Asian nation goes beyond sheer numbers. As Malaysia's flag carrier, the airline is regarded as a symbol of national pride and an important ambassador to the world.

This why Yates is of the view that the impending changes may not be as radical as expected in certain areas: "National flag carriers exist as much to fly the flag around the world as they do to fly passengers to and from the home state. Simply hacking off the long haul route network and becoming a local and regional carrier isn't necessarily the answer." The aviation expert is of the view that prudent pruning of long haul services could yield much better results and leave the carrier in a position to serve key markets.

Low morale

It is important to point out that the double tragedies have also had a strong impact on staff members. The airline said in a statement that 186 crew had left the company in the first seven months of this year, with many citing 'family pressure' as the reason for their resignation due to the MH17 and MH370 tragedies. Twenty-seven crew members were among the 537 people killed in the two tragedies.

Aziz explains that it is quite normal for staff to resign, especially after such a double incident. "They tend to lose focus, feel depressed or simply lose the desire to work in the company." Therefore, this is to be expected said the analyst. Malaysia Airlines System Employees Union secretary general Abdul Malek Ariff was quoted by the Edge Financial newspaper as saying that some crew "are now afraid to fly." He also said crew shortages were forcing staff to work up to 12 hours a day.

There are also media reports stating that, under current CEO Ahmad Jauhari Yahya, staff morale has reached an all time low, with crews complaining of a lack of career advancement. "Ahmad Jauhari had worked in the power, oil and media industries prior to taking the top job at the airline and simply didn't possess the skill set necessary to drive the business forward," said Yates.

Experts argue that whoever is brought in to succeed him needs to have significant airline experience and wisdom of the ages to navigate though turbulent times. "The new man at the helm will have to at least send out a convincing message that in return for pain now benefits will be seen eventually," Yates added.

Some of those required skills will be the ability to rebuild trust and bring the workforce together behind the CEO. According to Grossbongardt, hiring a foreign expert with experience in restructuring and turning around an airline might be a good idea. "Many very successful airlines today are run by expats - just think of Emirates and Etihad for example," he says.

Two employees of Malaysia Airlines rest under an aircraft while passengers look on at the terminal of Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang, 22 May 2006.
Despite its troubles, Malaysia Airlines is regarded as a symbol of national pride and an important ambassador of the country to the worldImage: TEH ENG KOON/AFP/Getty Images

Impending job cuts

Nevertheless, up to 6,000 MAS employees are set to lose their jobs and analysts agree that substantial cuts to the workforce are inevitable if the carrier is to survive. "Malaysia Airlines has been burdened for too long by chronic overstaffing amongst the mostly unionized workforce. The unions have previously fought off at least two other attempts to cut staff, but with the writing firmly on the wall it seems likely they will acquiesce in order to save the airline from imminent demise," said Yates.

Experts agree that the airline's survival will depend on two key factors: the willingness of shareholders to inject new money into the firm and management's ability to restructure the carrier. "The airline needs to adapt its business model to a market where it is facing increasing competition from the Gulf carriers and AirAsia with its successful low cost operation," Grossbongardt said.

Given that trust is the basis of the entire airline business, it is imperative that the restructuring plan and future campaigns also address this issue, Grossbongardt added: "When people are in doubt about whether an airline can provide safe and secure transportation, they stop buying its tickets. It's a very emotional thing and it doesn't really matter, whether it was the company's fault or whether people think it is just ill-fated."