Jasons Travel in talks with banks as annual loss looms, breaches loan covenant

Jasons Travel Media, which announced the departures of its chief executive and a director in the past two months, is in talks with its banks after breaching lending covenants and forecasting an annual loss.

The Auckland-based company is bracing for a pretax loss in the year ending March 31, which will breach its interest cover and debt to earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation covenants, and has asked ANZ New Zealand for a waiver, it said in a statement.

As at Sept. 30, Jasons had $2.3 million in borrowings falling due in the following 12 months, and $1.9 million in financial liabilities maturing beyond that timeframe. As a ratio to Jason’s total equity, the company’s gearing rose to 191 percent as at Sept. 30 from 108 percent six months earlier.

“Jasons has tackled its balance sheet with rigour and paid down relatively large amounts of debt during a time of global economic uncertainty while at the same time implementing a number of changes designed to better serve its customers and meet client expectations,” chairman John Sandford said. “We’re focused on rebuilding the company’s position as a profitable, successful company based on our position as a trusted source of travel information.”

The company blamed Australian sales that were well behind budget as the main cause for the downturn, and will “significantly” scale back its operations across the Tasman, including job cuts. The New Zealand operation was slightly behind budget, though Jasons will have to account for non-cash adjustments in the period and increased accruals for bad debts on both sides of the Tasman.

Jasons has been hit by the downturn in tourist numbers as the strength of the Australasian currencies and high cost of long-haul flights has tarnished the appeal of a holiday in the South Pacific.

Last month Jasons announced chief executive Kevin Francis would leave in mid-May for personal reasons, while earlier this month director Nick Baylis resigned from the board to focus his efforts on other business opportunities.

The NZAX-listed shares were unchanged at 18 cents, valuing the company at $3.6 million.

(BusinessDesk)

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