Latest Channel 4 News:
Gino is crowned King of the Jungle
Thousands homeless in Brazil storms
Chicken found stuffed with cocaine
Dozens die in Taliban mosque attack
20 dead after blaze at karaoke bar

Ryanair warning despite soaring profits

Updated on 02 November 2009

By Channel 4 News

Budget airline Ryanair says falling fuel costs have boosted profits to £376.6m, but adds that cut-price fares will mean losses for the rest of the year.

Ryanair (Reuters)

The firm said pre-tax profits were £376.6m in the six months to 30 September, from £94.4m last year, but said the results were "heavily distorted" by a 42 per cent drop in fuel costs.

Ryanair said this masked a 17 per cent decline in average fares and warned that prices would fall 20 per cent over the rest of the year, resulting in losses for the last two quarters.

Ryanair chief executive Michael O'Leary said the group would be "substantially profitable at a time when many of our competitors are losing money, consolidating or going bust".

He said traffic growth is strong "but at the expense of declining average fares", while the weakness of sterling and tourist taxes in the UK and Ireland had also hit takings.

"Ryanair remains ideally positioned to return to substantial profit growth as Europe emerges from this economic downturn and we remain confident that our 'growth during a recession' policy will continue to deliver substantial returns for our passengers, our people and our shareholders," he said.

Revenues were down 2 per cent at £1.6bn. Market conditions continued to be tough, particularly in Ireland and the UK, where overall air traffic is forecast to decline 15 per cent and 10 per cent respectively.

Ryanair said it would consider binning growth plans if it cannot agree a deal with Boeing over an order for 200 aircraft due for delivery between 2013 and 2016.

"We see no point in continuing to grow rapidly in a declining yield environment, where our main aircraft partner is unwilling to play its part in our cost reduction programme by passing on some of the enormous savings which Boeing have enjoyed both from suppliers and more efficient manufacturing in recent years," Mr O'Leary said.

"We would prefer to grow, but if Boeing doesn't share our vision, then I believe that Ryanair should change course before the end of this fiscal year and manage the airline over the next three years to maximise cash for distribution to shareholders."

The firm said it had won market share from high-fare carriers led by Air France, British Airways and Lufthansa and expects this trend to continue.

Today's results come ahead of rival BA, which is expected to reveal a substantial slide into the red on Friday in the wake of its first ever April to June loss since privatisation in 1987.

Send this article by email

More on this story

Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest Business & Money news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Vauxhall not for sale

Vauxhall (Credit: Reuters)

Workers at two Vauxhall plants face an uncertain future.

Postal strike

A pillar box (picture: Reuters)

Which people are affected most by the CWU walkout?

The price of being green

image

Would you pay green taxes to combat climate change?

Windows v the internet?

A Windows logo (picture: Getty Images)

Are online applications the biggest competition for Windows 7?

Faisal Islam on Twitter

faisalislam

Its a talk @chathamhouse for their under-35 wing. It starts in an hour! we've had Teenies and tentees and even the 'Tweenies' so far

This week

Follow us

How to tweet

How and why to follow the Channel 4 News family on Twitter.

Week in pictures

credit: Reuters

A selection of the best pictures from around the world.




Channel 4 © 2009. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.