San Diego Union-Tribune

LUFTHANSA AND AIR FRANCE PREDICT A BUMPER SUMMER

European carriers wary of costs and fuel prices increasing later this year

- BY WILLIAM WILKES & SIDDHARTH PHILIP

Europe’s biggest airlines are growing increasing­ly confident that the easing of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns will kick off a summer boom as a surge in bookings spurs them to lift capacity.

Deutsche Lufthansa and Air France-KLM are less certain about prospects going deeper into the year, with the German company saying Thursday that fuel prices are tough to predict and that it’s not clear how far increasing household costs will weigh on demand.

Both carriers reported a strong start to 2022 after the impact from the Omicron variant of COVID-19 quickly faded. Lufthansa said that demand has “recovered faster and stronger than expected in recent weeks,” while Air France-KLM Chief Executive Officer Ben Smith said that corporate and premium sales have begun to revive, following an already strong upward trend in leisure demand.

European airlines are adding seats and flights as the dropping of travel curbs opens up markets after two years of upheaval, with Lufthansa planning to deploy 2022 capacity equal to 75 percent of the 2019 level, up from 70 percent previously. At the same time a jump in costs for everything from fuel to staff is pressuring margins, pushing carriers to raise fares -- something that might not be sustainabl­e as household budgets come under pressure.

Planemaker Airbus, which reported results Wednesday signaled long-term confidence in global travel by lifting future jetliner build rates.

Air France-KLM said in a statement it expects to break even in operating income in the second quarter and to be “significan­tly positive” in the third. Lufthansa, which already posted a surprise profit in the third quarter of last year, reiterated guidance for an improvemen­t in fullyear adjusted earnings before interest and tax.

Air France-KLM reported an operating loss of 350 million euros for the first quarter, a 40 percent beat on expectatio­ns, according to Bernstein analyst Alex Irving, who said in a note that “the outlook for the summer is sunny,” while Lufthansa cut its adjusted Ebit loss to 591 million euros from 1.05 billion euros a year earlier, also beating analyst estimates.

Carsten Spohr, the German company’s CEO, said he’s “mentally ticking off the crisis” as the COVID threat recedes.

At the same time, Lufthansa warned that “uncertaint­ies remain for the company’s further business developmen­t,” with the fuel trend and consumer behavior as inflation climbs impossible to predict.

German inflation last month jumped to the highest level since post-reunificat­ion records began in the early 1990s, while Lufthansa’s kerosene costs more than doubled in the first quarter.

The carriers have some protection again the oil price. Lufthansa is hedged on 63 percent of its expected 2022 fuel requiremen­t at a break even price of $74 per barrel, with coverage ranging from 65 percent this quarter to 55 percent in the fourth.

Air France-KLM is 72 percent hedged for the current quarter, dropping to 43 percent by the final three months.

CEO Smith said the FrancoDutc­h

company also sees increases in staff costs, though wage demands should be balanced by relations with unions that “are much better than they’ve been for decades.” Lufthansa, by contrast, said it has made little progress in pay talks with pilots.

Smith told Bloomberg TV he sees travel remaining a priority for people for at least the next nine months to a year. Sales should be buoyed by the “new phenomenon” of high-end leisure bookings, with spending on personal trips far higher than before the pandemic. He said the trend has led to soaring occupancy at the top Paris hotels and appears to be “here to stay.”

Corporate travel at Air France-KLM is also back to 70 percent of normal levels across the North Atlantic, with the group planning to deploy more capacity there this summer than in 2019. Lufthansa Chief Financial Officer Remco Steenberge­n said business travelers have so far been accepting of fare hikes, with no immediate prospect of the increases hitting demand.

 ?? MICHAEL PROBST AP ?? The German carrier Lufthansa said that demand has “recovered faster and stronger than expected in recent weeks.”
MICHAEL PROBST AP The German carrier Lufthansa said that demand has “recovered faster and stronger than expected in recent weeks.”

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