The word "puzzling" (l.5) is synonymous with baffling.
A fight breaks out at the low-cost airline
1 ____ There is never a good time to have a full-blown
boardroom brawl in public. But for Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou,
a flamboyant serial entrepreneur, to have chosen this moment
4 to go to war with his fellow directors at easyJet, a budget
airline, is as puzzling as it is potentially destructive.
The airline industry is reeling from the twin effects
7 of seesawing fuel prices and tumbling demand. Thirty
airlines have already succumbed this year and as many again
are forecast to disappear in 2009. As Europe’s fourth-biggest
10 airline, easyJet, founded by Sir Stelios 13 years ago, will not
be one of them. Its strong balance-sheet, modern fleet and
low-cost operating model mean it is much better placed than
13 most of its competitors to ride out the storm. But it is still
feeling the strain. Sir Stelios, who controls 38% of easyJet,
began his attack on November 13th, arguing that the airline’s
16 plans to expand its fleet during the recession should be
abandoned. He added that easyJet should consider paying a
dividend from 2011, reversing its policy of investing
19 available funds to support the airline’s growth. To this end,
he invoked rights that were established when the company
was floated, by proposing to put two representatives of his
22 holding company, easyGroup, on the board. Sir Stelios hinted
that if the chairman, Sir Colin Chandler, refused to
acquiesce, he would reassume the chairmanship himself, as
25 he is entitled to do. Sir Stelios says he is only calling for a
more cautious approach. Some observers think that his
knowledge of the shipping industry, which is undergoing
28 even greater pain than the airline business, has persuaded him
that this is a time to batten down hatches. Others have
suggested that he needs the promise of a dividend flow to
31 fund his other interests. There has even been some
far-fetched speculation that he may be trying to drive down
easyJet’s share price in order to retake control of it.
34 ___ Whatever his reasons, they spell trouble for easyJet.
The airline’s expansion plans for the coming year are
modest: capacity is planned to grow by 5% compared with
37 the 15% that is easyJet’s norm. Given the desperate state of
Alitalia and the difficulties of Iberia, easyJet, which has hubs
at Milan Malpensa and Madrid Barajas, is in a strong
40 position to benefit. Mr van Klaveren fears that the
ultra-cautious approach Sir Stelios is advocating, combined
with talk of dividends, could result in the stock going
43 “ex-growth” and losing the premium it shares with its rival,
Ryanair. It is hard to see how that is in anyone’s interests.
Internet: <www.economist.com> (adapted).
Judge the following items about the ideas and the linguistic structure of the text above.
The word "puzzling" (l.5) is synonymous with baffling.