Saturday Dec 14, 2024
Tuesday, 8 May 2018 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
PARIS (Reuters) - Air France-KLM shares suffered their biggest one-day fall in a decade on Monday after its chief executive said he would resign following the rejection of a pay deal by the airline’s staff.
CEO Jean-Marc Janaillac’s attempt to cut costs at the carrier to keep up with competition from budget airlines and Gulf rivals ran into strong union resistance, as had his predecessor’s efforts, raising questions over its ability to reform.
Air France-KLM’s board will decide on a management transition plan on May 15. The government over the weekend said the French state, the largest shareholder with a 14% stake, would not ride to the airline’s rescue.
Air France-KLM shares fell as much as 14.3% to an intraday low of 6.93 euros ($8.30) in early trading, around at their lowest level since April 2017. The stock was down 13.3% at 7.02 euros by 0810 GMT.
Janaillac’s looming departure after his high-stakes gamble to put the pay offer to a vote by all employees backfired was the worst possible outcome, analysts at brokerage Bernstein said.
“This leaves the company with no CEO, no labour contract, an ongoing dispute, and likely emboldened unions which will be even less likely to concede on their demands, now,” Bernstein analysts said in a note.
Air France said 15% of its flights would be cancelled on Monday as pilots and cabin crew went on strike over the pay dispute for a 14th day since February. Air France-KLM shares are down almost 50% since the start of 2018, versus a 3.7% gain on the broader Paris SBF-120 index and a 4% fall on the pan-European STOXX 600 Travel & Leisure index.
A wave of strikes at Air France has so far cost the company 300 million euros.
Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire on Sunday urged the company and workers to resume talks, delivering a blunt assessment of the airline’s future.