KEY POINTS
  • Qantas CEO Alan Joyce said the airline was not able to return to profit as quickly as other carriers like those in Singapore because it did not receive as much government support and faced a "massive wave of Covid ... nobody was planning for."
  • Australia's national carrier posted its third consecutive year of losses before tax of $1.19 billion Australian dollars ($830.67 million).
  • “We're very different from different airlines because within Singapore, there wasn't a need to sack, stand down people that we had to do,” the CEO told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.”


Qantas CEO Alan Joyce told CNBC the airline was not able to return to profit as quickly as other carriers like those in Singapore because it did not receive as much government support and faced a "massive wave of Covid ... nobody was planning for."

Australia's national carrier has posted its third consecutive year of statutory losses before tax of $1.19 billion Australian dollars ($830.67 million), attributing the performance to the delta and omicron outbreaks in Australia and upfront costs from restarting the airline after lockdowns ended.