Home > > Webjet's B2B and B2C operations see double-digit growth in H1

Webjet's B2B and B2C operations see double-digit growth in H1

09/05/2017| 2:46:28 PM| 中文

Webjet‘s B2B businesses bookings were up 49.4% with a total transaction up 39.5%; B2C businesses bookings were up 11.4% with a total transaction up 15.3%.

Australia-listed Webjet Limited has seen double-digit growth for the year to end-June across most of its B2C and B2B businesses.

However, a “technical accounting issue” relating to a supply and contracting deal between its European bedbank Sunhotels and UK tour operator Thomas Cook means the numbers are currently unaudited.

It appears as if Webjet will not be able to include some of its Sunhotels income as revenue during a transitional phase through to 2019, while having to accept the costs. In the year to end-Jun17, this new approach has cost Webjet more than A$11 million ($9 million) in EBITDA.

B2B operations growth

The rethink on how the deal should be accounted leads to three different set of figures, all of which show the business in the black when looking at net profit after tax – the statutory result is A$52.4 million ($42 million); in terms of “continuing operations” the gain is A$33.1 million ($26 million) with its underlying performance netting A$40.9 million ($33 million).

Leaving the accounting issue aside and looking at operations, the B2B side of the business – WebBeds – continues to grow. The unit includes Europe-focused Sunhotels, Lots of Hotels (focused on the Middle East and Africa but expanding into North America) and FIT Ruums in APAC (launched last November). The businesses handled 726,000 bookings – up 49.4% – with a total transaction value of A$482 million ($384 million) – up 39.5%.

Lots of Hotels was helped by the improving economic conditions in the Middle East with booking volumes up by 74% year-on-year at 283,000; Sunhotels volumes were up 22.5%. There are no year-on-year comparisons for FIT Ruums but it has pulled in A$80 million ($64 million) of TTV in only eight months.

After the year ended, WebJet acquired UK-based Jac Travel to add to its B2B line-up, making it the second largest bedbank in Europe and the second largest in the world.

B2C operations growth

The B2C operations have also turned in double-digit growth. Its core Webjet OTA saw volumes up 11.4% to 1.4 million and TTV up 15.3% to A$1.14 billion ($907 million). Flight and package bookings were up by 12.7% and 38.2% respectively, with standalone hotels down by more than 20% “in line with our strategic decision to no longer actively promote standalone B2C hotel offerings”.

Online Republic, a New Zealand-based OTA which specialises in car hire, motorhome rental and cruise which Webjet Ltd bought in June 16, contributed its first full year’s worth of business. Booking volumes were up 28% to 446,000 with TTV of A$267 million ($212 million) up 22%.

During the year it sold Zuji to Hong Kong’s Uriel Aviation for $A56 million ($45 million) double what it paid Travelocity for the business four years previously. Webjet continues to run a Zuji site in Australia under licence but the volumes are not material to its overall B2C performance.

Read original article

TAGS: Webjet | B2B | OTA | Australia
©2022 广州力矩资讯科技有限公司 粤ICP备06070077号
Tell us more about yourself!