Daily Mail

EasyJet heads for another year of losses

As analysts put cost of axed flights at £200m...

- By Luke Barr

EASYJET will likely rack up another year of losses as it cancels thousands more flights and leaves holidaymak­ers in the lurch.

the budget airline was on track to return to profit this year as it bounced back from the pandemic.

But amid chaotic scenes at airports across the UK and Europe, the carrier yesterday slashed the number of flights it planned for the summer.

It is feared as many as 10,000 flights could be cancelled between july and september – leaving the holiday plans of 1.5m customers in jeopardy.

analysts had expected Easyjet to be back in the black this year having suffered £2.2bn of losses since coronaviru­s struck in 2020. But with revenues taking another hit and costs rising, they slashed their forecasts yesterday. Experts at private wealth manager Bernstein warned the lost flights could cost it as much as £200m.

and brokers at Peel Hunt said Easyjet was on course to make a £59m loss this year having previously pencilled in a £44m profit.

analyst alex Paterson said: ‘ Because the disruption has dragged on, costs have increased.’

shares fell 4pc in early trading yesterday before ending up 1.5pc, or 6.7p, at 443.7p.

sophie Lund-yates, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: ‘these plans are going to prolong total recovery for Easyjet. the costs that come with ramping operations back up are huge.

‘so while it’s a customer apology being doled out today, any deviation from the new plan will mean the same courtesy would be due to shareholde­rs.’

In an unschedule­d trading update, Easyjet said it was ‘proactivel­y consolidat­ing’ – or axing in plain English – flights in a bid to avoid last-minute cancellati­ons. It said the move would give customers advance notice and the chance to rebook on alternativ­e flights. Holidaymak­ers have been hit by mass cancellati­ons and long queues at airports ever since travel restrictio­ns were eased in spring, with Easyjet and British airways among the worst offenders amid staff shortages and It failures.

In a move that will fuel concerns about the summer, Easyjet said it expects capacity between april and june to be around 87pc of pre-pandemic levels, having previously forecast 90pc. and it cut the outlook for the crucial july to september holiday period from 97pc to 90pc – raising the prospect that 10,000 flights could be axed. In a grovelling apology, chief executive johan Lundgren said: ‘We are sorry that for some customers we have not been able to deliver the service they have come to expect from us.’

Heathrow was also forced to ‘apologise unreserved­ly’ after it cancelled flights at two terminals yesterday following a weekend that saw luggage pile up.

Lundgren said he was forced to act after London Gatwick and amsterdam’s schiphol airport imposed a cap on flights.

the airline has already cancelled thousands of flights, particular­ly during school holidays at Easter and the half- term period, which coincided with the jubilee bank holiday weekend.

No-frills rival Ryanair, however, capitalise­d on the cancellati­ons, adding over 200 extra flights from its UK airports.

 ?? ?? Apology: Chief executive Johan Lundgren admitted service has been below expectatio­ns
Apology: Chief executive Johan Lundgren admitted service has been below expectatio­ns
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom