You are here: Home » Reuters » News
Business Standard

Ex-race ace Lauda's reclaimed, rebranded airline targets 2019 profit

Reuters  |  VIENNA 

(Reuters) - aims to turn a profit from next year with Laudamotion, the he has rebranded after buying it back from insolvent Air Berlin, the ex-motor racing champion said on Friday.

The former airline, which he founded in 2003, will begin operations under its new name on March 25 with six leased aircraft. Its first flight will be from Duesseldorf, Germany, to

"You cannot expect to make money in the first year. But if you make it right, you should start earning money from the second year on," a conference in

The three-times champion pipped owner IAG to win the bidding for in January, initially investing around 50 million euros ($62 million) and then more to relaunch operations.

said he will add flights from from April and from from June, expanding the fleet to 21 planes. The carrier will fly to holiday destinations in Greece, and in summer and add city shuttles and charter flights later this year.

"Shuttles at the right price with the right product plus charter flights, this is what we need and my goal is to implement that from autumn," he said.

Of the 60,000 takeoff and landing slots he bought as assets only 40,000 were needed, and he will return 20,000.

The 69-year old Austrian has a deal in place for German Condor, part of Thomas Cook, to sell flights for and provide marketing and crew planning.

It is as yet unclear how a cooperation planned with could be organised.

He said talks he and were holding with the Austrian regulator on Friday should shed some light on whether the German carrier's budget unit could also sell flights, and whether it could lease back planes from including crew.

"We need to know what is allowed and what is not," he said.

Lauda, under time pressure to sell tickets for the summer, is keen to tap his rival's sales and marketing channels, while Lufthansa, which scrapped a plan to buy due to concerns, wants to make use of Laudation's capacity.

currently has 641 staff and needs to hire about 50 additional flight attendants to operate the 21 planes, said.

($1 = 0.8110 euros)

(Reporting by Kirsti Knolle; Editing by John Stonestreet)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 16 2018. 20:57 IST
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU