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Fastjet to move headquarters to South Africa

Johannesburg - African discount airline Fastjet will switch to a fleet of Embraer SA regional jets from larger Airbus Group SE planes as new chief executive officer Nico Bezuidenhout seeks to stem losses by better matching capacity to demand.

The fledgling carrier will also move its headquarters to Johannesburg from London to pare expenses and bring the company closer to its key markets, Bezuidenhout, who took over as CEO last month, said in an interview in the African city, the base of his former employer South African Airways.

Fastjet will have returned three leased 145-seat Airbus A319 jets by the end of September and plans to sub-lease two, with a sixth, which it owns, up for sale. The carrier has agreed short-term leases on three Embraer E190s with fewer than 120 seats apiece, the first of which is due in Tanzania within two weeks.

Bezuidenhout took over after predecessor Ed Winter quit following clashes with investor Stelios Haji-Ioannou, the EasyJet Plc founder, who had demanded cost cuts. The move to Johannesburg will be made in stages following consultation with the workforce, starting with the commercial department by the end of 2016. It should reduce head-office expenses by as much as 35 percent.

“Right now it’s about stabilisation,’’ Bezuidenhout said. “The right steps are being taken and it’s going in the right direction.”

Based on current projections Fastjet should break even in terms of its cash flow from the fourth quarter of next year, he said. The company, which has yet to report an annual profit and lost £16.9m ($22m) in 2015, said in June it remained cash flow negative, and raised £15.2m in a share sale last month to cover working capital.

The initial batch of Embraer planes will be taken on so-called wet-lease terms, including pilots, cabin crew and maintenance staff, so that they can start flying immediately. Bezuidenhout said he’ll probably replace them with aircraft of the same type on standard leases and manned by Fastjet employees by April.

“I can get wheels on the ground now,’’ he said. “Every flight that takes off that you are only selling half the seats, you are losing money.’’
Load Factor Boost

The switch from A319s should lift FastJet’s load factor from the 47% reported in June to above 70%, Bezuidenhout said.

While that’s a healthier occupancy level, the majority of the world’s low-cost airlines prefer the greater efficiencies of Airbus and Boeing jetliners. Many costs also remain fixed whatever the size of plane.

Bezuidenhout is also making changes to FastJet’s route network, cutting frequencies on the route from the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam - its main operating base - to Zanzibar, and replacing a daily flight from Dar es Salaam to Nairobi, Kenya, with a twice-weekly service from Nairobi to Kilimanjaro.

The company has begun consultation on restructuring its workforce and is targeting a reduction in numbers of the most costly expatriate staff, such as pilots, the CEO said.

Sales should benefit from switching to a new mobile-payment platform and adopting the Amadeus distribution system, which will make Fastjet flights available to at least 50% of travel agents in Africa. The carrier is also planning to finally activate an existing sales agreement with Dubai-based long-haul giant Emirates.

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