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Ryanair warns of profit slump

Rising labour and fuel costs may lead to shakeout

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LONDON: Ryanair Holdings Plc warned that profit will slump for the first time in five years as rising labour costs compound a fuel-price surge that may force weaker competitor­s out of business.

Net income could fall as much as 14% in the year through next March, Ryanair said yesterday. An increase in kerosene costs will add to the pressure in the short term but could spur a new round of airline failures that will benefit the Irish company by eliminatin­g competitor­s, it predicted.

“Spot prices close to US$80 a barrel are going to lead to a significan­t shakeout in the industry as early as this winter,” chief executive officer Michael O’Leary told Bloomberg Television. “Some of those loss-making airlines who couldn’t make money when oil was at US$40 a barrel certainly can’t survive.”

Europe’s biggest discount airline is also grappling with higher expenses after a rostering foul-up left it short of pilots, forcing it to sweeten contracts and recognise trade unions. O’Leary said the outlook this year depends largely on whether the squeeze from fuel leads to the early exit of weaker carriers such as Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, eliminatin­g capacity and bolstering fares, or whether they’re acquired before they can go bust.

In the case of Norwegian Air, a “rescue” by British Airways owner IAG SA would bring far less benefit than a grounding, since it would only slow capacity growth, the CEO said. IAG has had two offers for the Scandinavi­an discounter rejected and its chief Willie Walsh said last week that he’s prepared to walk away if acceptable terms can’t be reached.

Shares of Ryanair traded 1.4% € lower at 15.26 as of 8:17 am in London. The stock has gained 1.2% this year, valuing the company at € 18bil (US$21bil). €

Net income rose 10% to 1.45bil in the year ended March 31, Ryanair said in a statement. The figure will € fall back to a range of 1.25bil to €

1.35bil in the current 12 months, € including 100mil of higher crew costs, the carrier said in a forecast it said was “on the pessimisti­c side of cautious.”

Ryanair was forced to scrap more than 20,000 flights in September after botched staff rotas left it without sufficient pilots to crew all of its planes. The crisis meant the carrier had to refund passengers and engage in talks over unions after suffering the first strike in its history.

The market for experience­d pilots will “remain tight” for all European airlines over the next year, according to O’Leary. Ryanair said it has reached agreements with its UK and Italian pilots and made progress with cabin crew in Britain and Spain, while cautioning that there could be localized strikes as negotiatio­ns continue.

Unit costs will climb 6% this – or € 9% including a 400mil fuel headwind – according to Ryanair, which also sees growth in passenger numbers slowing and occupancy levels staying flat.The carrier also set out plans to scrap voting rights for UK shareholde­rs in the case of a so-called hard Brexit which will avoid breaching European Union ownership rules for airlines.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? Price pressure: O’Leary says some of those loss-making airlines who couldn’t make money when oil was at US$40 a barrel certainly can’t survive (with oil close to US$80 a barrel).
— Reuters Price pressure: O’Leary says some of those loss-making airlines who couldn’t make money when oil was at US$40 a barrel certainly can’t survive (with oil close to US$80 a barrel).

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