Qantas ups base prices to offset dropping of fuel surcharge

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QANTAS Airways Ltd said it would be raising base ticket prices to compensate for the axing of a separate fuel surcharge, pushing back against calls for the airline industry to lower fares in the wake of falling oil prices, a Reuters report said.

The Australian carrier, which is recovering from years of sharp earnings declines, said a more than halving in oil prices over the past six months was not enough to offset strong competition in international fares.

Other major airlines have also argued that base ticket prices are a function of demand, rather than costs, but Qantas appears to be the first to use the argument to defend an absorption of the fuel surcharge.

“If you look at the trends in global aviation over the past decade, costs and competition have been increasing while fares and airline margins have been falling,” Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said in a statement.

He added that passenger yields remained significantly below levels seen before the global financial crisis and that lower oil prices would leave airlines in a better position to invest in new aircraft, lounges and routes.

Oil is now 60 percent cheaper than it was at its June peak, fuelling an anticipated near $5 billion increase in global industry profits this year to $25 billion.