Air New Zealand expects early engine maintenance checks will prompt some changes to its international flight schedule, but doesn't anticipate a hit to earnings and affirmed annual guidance.
The company's shares were trading down 2.2 per cent at $3.305 today after saying the early maintenance checks on the Trent 1000 engine powering its Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner fleet would have some impact on the international schedule.
Last month engine maker Rolls Royce and regulator the European Aviation Safety Agency directed operators to carry out checks on certain engines every 300 cycles rather than the typical 2,000 threshold.
The Auckland-based airline today said it did not expect a material impact on earnings and affirmed annual guidance for 2018 pre-tax earnings to exceed the $527 million reported in the year ended June 30, 2017. Rolls Royce has said 380 engines globally are affected, including nine in the New Zealand carrier's fleet.
"Air New Zealand expects there will be some customer and operational impact to its international schedule as a result of the checks," general counsel Karen Clayton said in a statement to the stock exchange.