Irish Independent

Long game: Ryanair to wait out plane price hikes after Max grounding

- Laurence Frost and Tim Hepher

RYANAIR can wait out price rises sought by plane makers since the global grounding of the Boeing 737 Max, the Irish airline’s boss said yesterday.

Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary said his company could wait for prices to drop before placing any large orders.

“I think we have to wait for the next turn in the cycle,” he said at a Reuters Newsmaker event in London.

“At the moment, there are no pricing opportunit­ies on aircraft. The Max has been grounded, Airbus are pricing up, Boeing are pricing up because they’ve nothing to sell.”

Industry sources say Ryanair has begun commercial talks with Boeing over an order for a larger Max variant that could be finalised once the current version returns to service.

The price of the potential 737 Max 10 order is expected to include sharper discounts in lieu of cash compensati­on for the grounding of the older variants, the sources have said.

Ryanair has said it is interested in 100 Airbus A321neo aircraft for its recently acquired Laudamotio­n business, and the 737 Max 10 for its all-Boeing main fleet “at the right price”. But Mr O’Leary said the talks with Airbus were going slowly.

While Laudamotio­n provided a platform to acquire Airbus planes into the Ryanair Group, the Max grounding has not caused him to reconsider his policy of running just one aircraft type per airline, he said.

Ryanair has 135 of a special 197-seat version of Boeing’s grounded 737 Max 8 planes on order and options for a further 75. The Boeing 737 Max 10 is expected to have up to 230 seats.

Mr O’Leary said Ryanair was in “continuous dialogue” with Boeing in the hope that 30 to 40 737 Max jets could be operationa­l by summer 2020, assuming the plane is cleared to return to service by the end of this year or soon after.

Ryanair recently lowered the target for next year to 30 from 58 because of the delays caused by the grounding

of the Max fleet after two fatal crashes that killed 346 people.

Before the Max can return to service, US and European aviation authoritie­s need to approve software and training changes proposed by Boeing.

A likely proliferat­ion of European environmen­tal taxes will eventually force more carriers out of business, Mr O’Leary also predicted, while condemning proposals that would force low-cost carriers to bear the brunt of increased levies. “It’s going to hasten the consolidat­ion of the industry,” he said.

Government­s including France and the Netherland­s are introducin­g new airline taxes or considerin­g doing so, with exemptions for connecting flights.

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 ??  ?? Boeing talks: Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary takes questions in London
Boeing talks: Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary takes questions in London

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