Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Post Earns Profit, Gets Boost From Parcels And Lower Pension Costs

The Canadian Press , 28 Aug, 2014 12:45 AM
  • Canada Post Earns Profit, Gets Boost From Parcels And Lower Pension Costs
OTTAWA - The Canada Post Group of Companies reported Wednesday a net profit of $67 million in the second quarter, boosted by growth in its parcel delivery business and lower pension costs
 
The result was up from a loss of $50 million in the same period a year ago as revenue for the group, which includes the postal service, the Purolator courier service and other businesses, totalled $2.007 billion for the 13 weeks ended June 28, up from $1.862 billion a year ago.
 
All that prompted a call from the union representing many of its workers to find alternatives to cutting services.
 
"When our post office has been profitable for most of the last two decades, the types of cuts that Canada Post and the (federal) Conservatives are trying to impose on us are completely unnecessary," Denis Lemelin, national president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, said in a statement.
 
"We need to do what the rest of the world is doing and make the post office a better service, not a lack of service."
 
Canada Post, the group's largest division, earned $42 million in the second quarter, compared with a loss of $71 million in the same period a year earlier.
 
The traditional post office segment saw its revenue from operations climb 10 per cent to $1.56 billion, up from $1.35 billion in the comparable period of 2013, helped by higher stamp prices, provincial elections in Ontario and Quebec and increased parcel shipments.
 
Transactional mail revenue was $823 million, up from $732 million a year ago, even as the volume of mail slipped 2.3 per cent. Parcel revenue increased by 11.3 per cent to $353 million in the second quarter compared with $322 million a year ago.
 
Direct marketing revenue slipped to $308 million from $310 million, while other revenue totalled $75 million, up from $71 million in the same quarter last year.
 
Also helping boost the results was a $58-million reduction in employee benefit costs due to strong pension fund investment returns and an increase in interest rates used to calculate pension costs. However, the company warned that future employee benefit costs, including pensions, continue to be "high volatile and unpredictable."
 
Meanwhile, Purolator earned $20 million for the quarter on revenue from operations of $427 million, up from a profit of $18 million on $412 million in revenue in the same quarter last year.
 
Canada Post's logistics business, which includes SCI Group, earned $3 million on $52 million in revenue from operations, up from $2 million on $43 million in revenue a year ago.
 
The Crown corporation announced a plan late last year to phase out home delivery within five years and raise stamp prices.
 
It also said it would look to eliminate 6,000 to 8,000 positions over the same time period, mainly through attrition.
 
Canada Post said it continues to stay on course with its plan to cut down operating costs. In February, it installed community mailboxes for 100,000 addresses in 11 communities across Canada.
 
A total of 1.17 million conversions will be completed by 2015. It also raised prices for letter mail to better reflect inflation and operating costs.

MORE National ARTICLES

ICBC Seeks 5.2% Raise in Basic Insurance Rates

ICBC Seeks 5.2% Raise in Basic Insurance Rates
The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia is aiming to hike basic insurance rates by 5.2 per cent.

ICBC Seeks 5.2% Raise in Basic Insurance Rates

Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013

Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013
The number of cougars destroyed by conservation officers in B.C. in the 2013-2014 fiscal year jumped dramatically compared with a year earlier.

Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013

Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million

Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million
Pulp and bank note producer Fortress Paper Ltd. is selling its operations that make security film used in bank notes to Nanotech Security Corp. for up to $17.5 million in cash and shares.

Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million

Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms

Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms
Secondary schools in Vancouver are expected to be behind picket lines this week as part of a province-wide attempt to pressure the British Columbia government.

Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms

Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse

Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse
Police in western Manitoba have charged a couple with confining, starving and sexually abusing their children.

Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse

Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence

Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence
The Quebec government has called a public inquiry into the fire that killed 32 people at a seniors' residence last January.

Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence