BAA's Financial Situation

Press aticles

It has been widely reported that BAA and Ferrovial are facing severe financial problems.

The Financial Times estimates that BAA needs to raise £12bn to service its own borrowings, Ferrovial debt and its investment programme to 2013.

Ferrovial, whose shares fell 35 per cent over the 12 months to March 2008, cannot bail out BAA since it faces severe cash flow constraints itself.

This news section covers some of the articles on BAA's financial position.

BA chief Willie Walsh gets pay rise despite record losses PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 11 June 2009 00:00

Willie Walsh, the chief executive of British Airways, will receive an inflation-busting 6 per cent pay rise, taking his salary to £743,000 this year, and could gain £1.1 million in deferred share bonuses.

The pay award was published in the airline's annual report yesterday, but the timing is embarrassing as Mr Walsh is negotiating pay cuts with his employees. He said last night that he would forgo his annual bonus of up to £550,000 in shares this year.

Mr Walsh waived his cash bonus of £700,000 last year after the botched opening of Heathrow's Terminal 5 and has said that he will work for free during July.

BA lost £401 million last year and Mr Walsh has called for significant cost-cutting as the airline faces its "worst ever trading environment". The carrier has already reduced its headcount by 2,500 and is seeking the equivalent of a further 2,000 job loses. The company is also negotiating to cut bonuses and allowances that its 14,000 cabin crew have accumulated over many years of pay settlements.

Read the full article in
The Times.


With that kind of unashamed self-enrichment, there's definitely a future as a politician for you Mr. Walsh.

It's a pity parliament will have reformed the system by the time
the buck finally stops at the top of BA.

 
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