Air Travel Trust reports £18m surplus

Air Travel Trust reports £18m surplus

The Air Travel Trust (ATT) which pays out to holidaymakers when a travel firm fails has returned to surplus for the first time in 17 years.

The ATT annual report published this morning confirmed a fund surplus of £18 million – the first time it has been in the black since 1996.

The fund was in deficit to the tune of £18.45 million a year ago and was £42 million in the red as recently as March 2011.

The trustees report they took in £48.1 million in Atol Protection Contributions (APC) in the year to March, up from £42.6 million in the previous 12 months.

The £5.6 million increase was mainly due to Flight-Plus Atol payments following introduction of the licence for flight-plus bookings in April last year.

The ATT reported 19.2 million passengers made Atol payments in 2012-13, up from 17.3 million the previous year.

At the same time there were only 11 Atol company failures during 2012-13, representing a cost to the fund of £844,000.

This was down from 23 failures costing more than £14 million in 2011-12.

Only 37 passengers had to be repatriated during the 12 months and 1,354 were entitled to refunds.

ATT chairman Roger Mountford said: “The relatively low number of Atol-holder failures shows how well the travel industry performed last year, despite challenging financial circumstances.

“The industry worked alongside the Civil Aviation Authority to prepare for Atol reform, which was essential to ensure the scheme reflected the changing way people book holidays.

“This more stable period has resulted in the ATT’s welcome return to surplus, and with Flight-Plus successfully in place, consumers now enjoy greater protection for their holidays.”

Mountford added: “The introduction of the Atol certificate has also brought much-needed clarity to the scheme.”

Atol Certificates were introduced last October.

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Revenue rises, but IPO expenses put Norwegian Cruise Line in the red

Revenue rises, but IPO expenses put Norwegian Cruise Line in the red
By Tom Stieghorst
Norwegian Cruise Line posted a $96.4 million first-quarter loss, but said accounting rules that require it to recognize some one-time expenses masked a solid improvement in its business.

Revenue rose to $527.6 million from $515.4 million.

Norwegian said that without $110 million in expenses related to its public offering in January, income would have been $12.9 million. Norwegian’s net profit was $3.3 million in last year’s first quarter.

“We had a fantastic quarter — above consensus,” said CEO Kevin Sheehan in an interview.

The expenses include costs tied to prepaying bonds and stock compensation for former executives.

Sheehan said by using the proceeds of the public offering, Norwegian was able to replace secured debt that carried 11.5% interest rates with unsecured debt that costs about 5%.

Norwegian raised $447 million in the quarter by selling 23.5 million shares for $19 each.

Excluding fuel, net cruise costs fell 1.5% in the quarter. Sheehan said the expense of introducing Norwegian Breakaway will likely raise cruise costs by 5% to 6% in the current quarter.

The New York-themed Breakaway is set to arrive before daybreak on May 7 at the Manhattan Cruise Terminal. The ship will be named the next day by the Rocketttes before starting a series of seven-day cruises to Bermuda.

ISS spotted

ISS spotted

I know this does not have anything to do with travel/cruise but i think this is worth blogging, i have just watch the International Space Station fly over my home in North Wales-FANTASTIC.

Downloaded an App called; ISS Detector worked excellently.

PS not my photo, i need a bigger lens for the camera! 🙂