Easyjet profits fall

Tuesday, 18 Nov, 2008 0

Easyjet’s pre-tax profits fell 45% in the year to September 30, despite a 17.3% rise in passengers.

The airline blamed higher fuel costs for the fall in profits to £110 million.

Its annual accounts were released today but were not approved by founder Stelios Haji-Iannou (see today’s separate story to find out why).

In its accounts summary, the airline said forward bookings for the first quarter of the financial year are currently slightly ahead of the previous year, despite a “very difficult and highly uncertain economic outlook”.

To counteract fuel costs it has reduced its aircraft utilisation for this winter from 11.6 hours to an average of nine hours a day.

“Winter capacity, measured in seats flown, will be broadly flat with last year but we expect competitor capacity on easyJet routes to fall by 7% in the same period,” it said.

“The impact of higher fuel costs will be felt most sharply in the first half of 2009 and thus pre-tax margins will decline in the first half compared to the prior year.”

For summer, Easyjet said yields will depend on the extent of the fall in consumer expenditure in Europe and the level of competitor capacity reduction in the market.

“We expect to see further downsizing and consolidation of many weak competitors,” it said.

Easyjet said it will look to cut costs through negotiations with suppliers, reductions in overheads and improved crew efficiency.

“For the full year at current fuel and exchange rates easyJet expects to be profitable,” it added.

Last week the airline’s founder Stelios Haji-Ioannou raised his stake in the firm to 26.9% and said it would reduce orders for new aircraft.

Chief executive Andy Harrison said: “ We recognise that economic conditions will be very difficult and easyJet is planning
accordingly, which means focusing on offering customers great value, driving down controllable costs and preserving cash.

“Unlike many of our competitors, our Airbus contract provides us with a flexible approach to fleet growth, which we intend to make full use of in such uncertain economic conditions. “

See separate story ‘Boardroom row at Easyjet’

By Bev Fearis



 

profileimage

Bev

Editor in chief Bev Fearis has been a travel journalist for 25 years. She started her career at Travel Weekly, where she became deputy news editor, before joining Business Traveller as deputy editor and launching the magazine’s website. She has also written travel features, news and expert comment for the Guardian, Observer, Times, Telegraph, Boundless and other consumer titles and was named one of the top 50 UK travel journalists by the Press Gazette.



Most Read

Vegas’s Billion-Dollar Secrets – What They Don’t Want Tourists to Know

Visit Florida’s New CEO Bryan Griffin Shares His Vision for State Tourism with Graham

Chicago’s Tourism Renaissance: Graham Interviews Kristin Reynolds of Choose Chicago

Graham Talks with Cassandra McCauley of MMGY NextFactor About the Latest Industry Research

Destination International’s Andreas Weissenborn: Research, Advocacy, and Destination Impact

Graham and Don Welsh Discuss the Success of Destinations International’s Annual Conference

Graham and CEO Andre Kiwitz on Ventura Travel’s UK Move and Recruitment for the Role

Brett Laiken and Graham Discuss Florida’s Tourism Momentum and Global Appeal

Graham and Elliot Ferguson on Positioning DC as a Cultural and Inclusive Global Destination

Graham Talks to Fraser Last About His England-to-Ireland Trek for Mental Health Awareness

Kathy Nelson Tells Graham About the Honour of Hosting the World Cup and Kansas City’s Future

Graham McKenzie on Sir Richie Richardson’s Dual Passion for Golf and His Homeland, Antigua
TRAINING & COMPETITION
Skip to toolbar
Clearing CSS/JS assets' cache... Please wait until this notice disappears...
Updating... Please wait...