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Austerity measures yielding progress at SAS
This article is more than 9 years old.
Latest financial results positive
Things appear to be slowly turning around at SAS. Financial results released today show what the company called “observable progress” on several fronts.
SAS announced third quarter revenue of about 8.6 billion kroner, a slight uptick from last year’s 8.5 billion kroner over the same period.
A strong third quarter resulted in a bottom line of 634 million kroner as opposed to last year’s 393 million kroner for the same period.
First bright spots in years
Market pressure from low-cost airlines have put increasing pressure on the Scandinavian icon.
The results are among the first positive signs the company has seen in years. SAS chief executive Rickard Gustafson partially attributed the upswing to what he called “systematic efficiency”.
“The improvement was primarily driven by our commercial success and the continued effects from our systematic efficiency initiatives,” said Gustafson.
READ MORE: Norwegian overtakes SAS as Scandinavia’s most used airline
“We look forward to an exciting autumn with preparations for our expansion of the intercontinental routes and a continued high pace of improvements to ensure SAS’s competitiveness and profitability in the long term.”
New initiatives
SAS recently announced plans to introduce cheaper flights whereby passengers pay for extras like bringing extra luggage in much the same way as they do on low-cost carriers like Ryanair.