Bangkok Post

Ryanair sees profits continuing

- SIDDHARTH VIKRAM PHILIP

Ryanair Holdings Plc said it’s confident it can sustain its profitable run into next year and beyond as surging travel demand drives fares and as the company operates more high-capacity, fuel-efficient aircraft.

Profit after tax in the fiscal third quarter through December reached €211 million ($229 million), compared with a loss of €96 million a year earlier, while sales rose 57% to €2.31 billion, Europe’s largest discount airline said in a statement yesterday. The company repeated its full-year profit outlook range of €1.325 billion to €1.425 billion, which Ryanair had raised earlier this month.

“We will deliver record profits in the current financial year and we would expect to continue to grow profitably into next year and beyond,” Chief Financial Officer Neil Sorahan said in an interview. “Based on current booking profiles, we think that fares will rise into Easter and the summer.”

The industry is recovering from its worst-ever slump, and discount airlines like Ryanair and EasyJet Plc are benefiting as budget-minded consumers hunt for deals. Ryanair said it’s winning market share in places like Spain and Scandinavi­a, and the airline is putting more capacity into markets, including the UK, using its fleet of high-capacity Boeing 737 Max aircraft that carry more people at reduced fuel burn.

Ryanair cautioned that some deliveries of the new Boeing model might slip as the US manufactur­er continues to grapple with production, with the CFO predicting that Ryanair may fall “four or five aircraft short for peak summer at this point in time.”

Passenger numbers should reach 168 million this fiscal year and rise to 225 million by 2026. Ryanair repeated that it will have a loss in its fiscal fourth quarter because the busy Easter travel time falls outside the period.

Chief Executive Officer Michael O’Leary said this month that the company was seeing its best ever sales for summer travel as travel remains a priority for the public and Ryanair expands its route network. The carrier said fares remained buoyant after rising last year and would likely show a further high single-digit percentage gain.

Sorahan said the company is benefittin­g from an influx of foreign tourists as more US travellers take advantage of the strong dollar and flows from Asia improve. Ryanair will make use of its strong balance sheet to pay off its €1.6 billion in maturing debt, he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Ryanair Boeing 737-800 takes off from the airport in Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
REUTERS A Ryanair Boeing 737-800 takes off from the airport in Palma de Mallorca, Spain.

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