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Oct 29, 2025

Investors Want Proof as Lufthansa Tries to Lose ‘Problem-Child’ Tag

Investors Want Proof as Lufthansa Tries to Lose ‘Problem-Child’ Tag
On the same day it revealed further domestic cut-backs, Deutsche Lufthansa AG found itself under fresh investor scrutiny. A Reuters analysis published early on 29 October notes that, despite CEO Carsten Spohr’s multi-year turnaround plan, Europe’s second-largest airline group still trails rivals Air France-KLM and IAG on both margins and share-price gains. Labour unrest and aircraft delivery delays threaten to derail cost-cutting targets, while pilot-union talks hang over Thursday’s Q3 results.

Spohr has pledged a 20 percent reduction in administrative headcount, fleet simplification and premium-cabin upgrades to push operating margins to 8–10 percent by 2030. Analysts quoted by Reuters remain sceptical, calling Lufthansa a “show-me story.” The group has issued two profit warnings this year, largely due to strikes by pilots and ground staff that led to mass flight cancellations—an operational headache for global mobility teams relocating talent.

For corporate travel planners the uncertainty means budgeting for potential strike disruption in 2026, especially if negotiations fail. Travel-policy experts recommend adding rail or competitor-air contingencies for critical movements and monitoring Lufthansa’s published strike timetable once talks resume.

From a talent-acquisition standpoint a leaner, tech-enabled Lufthansa could improve premium-cabin availability and onboard Wi-Fi reliability—key factors for executive mobility. Yet cost pressures may also drive further pruning of marginal routes, reinforcing the need for multi-modal travel strategies.

The German government still holds a 6 percent stake acquired during the pandemic bailout, and union leaders accuse management of prioritising shareholder returns over service quality. How Spohr balances labour peace with cost discipline will determine whether Lufthansa regains its status as a first-choice carrier for Germany-bound assignees.
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