Goldtrail ran on ridiculously tiny margins

Goldtrail  collapse atol Goldtrail should never have been allowed to trade or hold an Atol working on such tiny margins. The Caa should have kept a far closer eye on Goldtrail.

Goldtrail called in administrators Begbies Traynor on Friday – hours after paying £1.3 million to cover its flying with a “handful of airlines”.

Joint administrator Jamie Taylor said it was “unusual” for such a payment to be made just as a company was going into administration.

Tiny margins:

Goldtrail made an operating profit margin of just 0.82% during its last financial year according to accounts filed last month.

The operating profit was £445,000 for the year ending in September 2009 on sales of £54.4 million. Pre-tax profit was £452,767 in 2009 down from £495,688 the previous year.

Sales ranged from £17.2 million to £54.4 million in the past five years.

Meanwhile, Goldtrail’s collapse could cost the CAA up to £20 million to refund and repatriate the operator’s customers. The operator’s administrator Begbies Traynor is putting the likely cost to the CAA between £15 million and £20 million.

Goldtrail was not required to hold a bond as a condition of its Atol licence, and all costs will have to come out of the Air Travel Trust, which had a deficit of £31.8 million for the year ending in March 2010.



Leave a Response

Please note: comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.

« « Tropical cyclone Bahamas Cuba Florida | Summer travel savings of 34% » »