Coronavirus: Rolls-Royce reports record loss as travel slumps

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Rolls Royce Trent 1000Image copyright Getty Images

Engineering giant Rolls-Royce, which makes jet engines, has reported record losses after the coronavirus pandemic caused demand for air travel to slump.

The firm reported a pre-tax loss of £5.4bn for the first half of this year.

On Wednesday, it confirmed plans to close factories in Nottinghamshire and Lancashire, as part of plans to cut 3,000 jobs across the UK.

Chief executive Warren East told the BBC he did not expect demand to recover to late-2019 levels until 2025.

Rolls-Royce is in the middle of the biggest restructuring of its business in its history.

The move is part of a previously announced cost-cutting exercise that will see the company slash its global workforce by a fifth, following the drastic fall in air travel because of the coronavirus outbreak.

The restructuring means that Rolls-Royce will reduce the number of sites it has worldwide from 11 to six.

Wide-body engine assembly and testing, which is currently carried out at three global sites, will be consolidated at its main site in Derby.

Rolls-Royce employs 50,000 people around the world, about half of them in the UK.

Uncertain climate

Chief executive Warren East told the BBC's Today programme that so far this year, 4,500 people worldwide had left the company.

He said Rolls-Royce had originally expected to deliver up to 500 jet engines this year, but would now manage only half that.

Rolls-Royce said it intended to sell its Spanish unit ITP Aero and other assets to raise at least £2bn.

Rolls-Royce makes money not from the sale of engines, but their use. When planes stop flying - as they have done during the pandemic - its revenues slow to a trickle. It has responded with a swingeing cost-cutting programme, with 9,000 jobs going.

Despite these self-help measures, Rolls-Royce still made a £1.7bn operating loss in the first half of the year. But the big hit came from changes it has been forced to make to its currency hedging programme, which it has in place to protect it against swings in the value of the US dollar.

The slump in airline flying means it can no longer expect such a large stream of US dollar revenues, so it has closed off some of its hedge trades early. The cost is £2.5bn. When you add in other restructuring costs, the total loss for the six months is £5.4bn,

The big question now is when - and how - Rolls-Royce will shore up its balance sheet by raising money. It has earmarked £2bn worth of assets for sale - including Spain's ITP Aero - but that is unlikely to be enough. The next step is expected to be a rights issue, where existing shareholders pay for more shares at a discount to the market price. That could bring in around £2bn, about half the company's current stock market value.

Some analysts think Rolls-Royce will eventually need more - and that a government intervention cannot be ruled out.

"In light of ongoing uncertainty in the civil aviation sector, we are continuing to assess additional options to strengthen our balance sheet to enable us to emerge from the pandemic well placed to capitalise on the long-term opportunities in all our markets," it added.

These options could include selling off more divisions, refinancing or even issuing fresh shares, but no decisions have been taken as yet.

Rolls-Royce added that chief financial officer Stephen Daintith had resigned, but would remain in his role for now to support an orderly transition.

Mr Daintith will be joining online grocery firm Ocado as their chief financial officer in November.

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