Gulf News

Ryanair promises record revenue

Shrugging off Brexit, airline says no evidence yet to justify cut to profit forecast

-

Low-cost giant Ryanair remains on track for a record profit this year, it said yesterday, dodging turbulence caused by Britain’s vote to leave the European Union thanks to pre-referendum bookings and high exposure to continenta­l Europe.

While the airline still faces a cocktail of risks from Brexit, which may force it to cut profit forecasts later in the year, Chief Executive Michael O’Leary said he “did not see the evidence to justify a cut” right now.

He said Ryanair still sees profits after tax of between €1.375 billion (Dh5.54 billion) and €1.425 billion, an increase of 13 per cent on last year.

“I don’t think any other airline in Europe will be delivering or forecastin­g that kind of profit growth,” he said in a prerecorde­d video presentati­on. “But all of the clouds on the horizon suggest there are significan­t risks to the downside in the second half of the year.” Ryanair shares were up 5.5 per cent at €11.5 0815 GMT, a fall of 16 per cent since the Brexit vote.

Rival easyJet PLC last week said it was unable to give an earnings forecast in the aftermath of Brexit, a deadly attack in Nice and an attempted coup in Turkey, while Germany’s Lufthansa warned on profit.

Ryanair said average fares were down 8 per cent in the three months to the end of June, in line with easyJet and only slightly worse than an earlier forecast for a fall of up to 7 per cent.

Trimming UK capacity

Ryanair is only dependent on Britain for around a quarter of its revenue, compared to around half for easyJet, and it has a significan­tly lower cost base. Ryanair said it had already sold around 75 per cent of its tickets for the three months to the end of September, compared to a rate of 65 per cent reported by easyJet.

Significan­t sales before June 23, the day of the Brexit referendum, reduced the impact of the fall in sterling on summer bookings, said chief financial officer Neil Sorohan.

To minimise further impact, Ryanair will start to trim capacity from UK airports this winter, although it will not close any routes.

Most of the 50 planes due for delivery next year will be allocated to non-British routes, as Ryanair “pivots growth away from UK airports” due to Brexit, O’Leary said.

Eastern European-focused budget airline Wizz Air last week also reiterated its preBrexit profit forecast after announcing plans to shift significan­t capacity away from the UK market.

 ?? Rex Features ?? Ryanair is only dependent on Britain for around a quarter of its revenue. The airline said significan­t ticket sales before the Brexit referendum reduced the impact on bookings.
Rex Features Ryanair is only dependent on Britain for around a quarter of its revenue. The airline said significan­t ticket sales before the Brexit referendum reduced the impact on bookings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates