前收市價 | 6.22 |
開市 | 6.22 |
買盤 | 6.15 x 25257400 |
賣出價 | 5.57 x 8220300 |
今日波幅 | 6.14 - 6.25 |
52 週波幅 | 4.67 - 6.83 |
成交量 | |
平均成交量 | 8,521,282 |
市值 | 10.07B |
Beta 值 (5 年,每月) | 1.08 |
市盈率 (最近 12 個月) | 6.72 |
每股盈利 (最近 12 個月) | 0.92 |
業績公佈日 | 2024年2月22日 |
遠期股息及收益率 | 無 (無) |
除息日 | 2020年3月02日 |
1 年預測目標價 | 7.26 |
Qantas Airways said on Tuesday it will suspend flights to Shanghai starting on July 28, citing low demand, nine months after the Australian flag carrier resumed service from Sydney on hopes of a travel rebound following the pandemic. International flight numbers to and from China are about 70% of pre-pandemic levels and have been slower to recover than in other markets because of fewer tourists and a domestic economic slowdown. Qantas aircraft on the Shanghai route will be redirected to other destinations across Asia with higher demand or new tourism opportunities, the company said.
(Bloomberg) -- Qantas Airways Ltd. will pay a A$100 million ($66 million) penalty and compensate passengers for selling tickets on thousands of flights it had already decided to cancel, as Chief Executive Officer Vanessa Hudson continues costly repairs to the airline’s battered reputation.Most Read from BloombergTruce Talks Drag as Hamas Hits Israel Crossing in Deadly AttackBuffett Praises Apple After Trimming It, Drops Paramount StakeTreasury Rally Risks Running Into a $125 Billion Brick WallFr
SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia's Qantas Airways agreed to pay A$120 million ($79 million) to settle a regulator lawsuit over the sale of thousands of tickets on already cancelled flights, in an attempt to end a reputational crisis that has engulfed the airline. The company will split A$20 million between more than 86,000 customers who booked tickets on the so-called "ghost flights" and pay a A$100 million fine instead of defending the lawsuit that it had previously vowed to fight, Qantas and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) said on Monday. The fine is the biggest ever for an Australian airline and among the largest globally in the sector, although some Australian banks and casino operators have faced higher penalties for breaches of the law.