Kenya Airways Pursues Half-Billion Dollar Capital Injection
Kenya Airways has reported a pretax loss of 12.17 billion Kenyan shillings in the first half of 2025, marking a sharp reversal from the 634 million shilling profit earned in the same period last year. The slump is largely attributed to grounded aircraft-three Boeing 787-8 Dreamliners were sidelined for maintenance, constraining capacity and dragging down revenue to 74.5 billion shillings from 91.5 billion shillings previously.
In response to the setback, the airline's chief executive, Allan Kilavuka, announced an aggressive capital-raising plan, aiming to secure at least $500 million by the first quarter of 2026, subject to shareholder approval. One of the grounded Dreamliners rejoined service in July, with a goal to fully restore fleet operations by next year.
The carrier's financial turbulence is not new. After insolvency in 2018, prompted by overexpansion and heavy debt, Kenya Airways relied on state bailouts, including a $150 million loan settlement by the government in January 2025. Full-year 2024 results had offered a reprieve, delivering a pretax profit of 5.53 billion shillings, buoyed significantly by foreign-exchange gains as the Kenyan shilling appreciated more than 20 percent against the dollar.
The current half-year outcome shows operating income swung into negative territory-recording a 6.2 billion shilling loss as opposed to a 1.3 billion shilling profit in the same half of 2024. The downturn underscores ongoing challenges for the airline, including capacity constraints, weaker demand, and mounting pressure to maintain competitiveness amid global aviation industry headwinds.
Kilavuka outlined that the targeted capital would underpin fleet expansion and modernisation, boost operational resilience, and enhance long-term shareholder value. This move aligns with prior strategic efforts-such as Project Kifaru-that helped the airline recover in 2024 through cost efficiencies, sustainability initiatives, and operational restructuring.
See also Ethiopia Claims Egypt is Hatching Plans to Disrupt Dam ProjectIndustry analysts observe that Kenya Airways' latest loss points to structural vulnerabilities. A sharper-than-expected revenue decline of nearly 19 percent year-on-year reflects a combination of diminished passenger traffic-down from about 2.54 million to roughly 2.2 million-and reduced seat capacity. Restoring the Dreamliners to service and sourcing new capital are critical for reversing this trend.
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