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Ryanair to start new service to Lublin, Poland

Ryanair (Dublin) has announced it will open a new route between London (Stansted) and Lublin โ€“ its 11thย Polish airport on December 17, bringing its Stansted winter schedule to 95 routes, including new winter routes to Budapest and Warsaw (Modlin), as well as ski routes to Grenoble, Salzburg and Turin.

The ultra low fare carrier also announced itย open a new route between Dublin and Lublin โ€“ its 11thย Polish airport on December 18, bringing its Dublin winter schedule to 54 routes, including new winter routes to Budapest and Warsaw (Modlin), as well as ski routes to Grenoble, Salzburg and Turin.

Copyright Photo: Arnd Wolf. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCJ (msn 33564) taxies at the ski destination of Salzburg.

Ryanair:ย 

Ryanair reports a fiscal first quarter net profit of $121 million

Ryanair (Dublin) reported a fiscal first quarter net profit of $121 million.

Here is the official statement from the airline:

“Ryanair, Europeโ€™s only ultra-low cost airline today (Jul 30) announced that Q1 revenues increased 11% to โ‚ฌ1,284m as traffic grew 6% and ave. fares rose 4%.ย ย Unit costs rose 10% mainly due to a 27% (โ‚ฌ117m) increase in fuel costs which led to a โ‚ฌ40m decline in Q1 profit-as previously guided-to โ‚ฌ99m.

Summary Q1 Results (IFRS) in Euro.

 


Q1Results (IFRS) โ‚ฌ


June 30, 2011


June 30, 2012


% Change

Passengers

21.3m

22.5m

+6%

Revenue

ย โ‚ฌ1,155m

โ‚ฌ1,284m

+11%

Adjusted Profit after Tax

โ‚ฌ139m

โ‚ฌ99m

-29%

Adjusted Basic EPS(euro cent)

9.35

6.86

-27%

Ryanairโ€™s CEO, Michael Oโ€™Leary, said:

“As we previously guided, significantly higher fuel costs caused Q1 profits to fall by โ‚ฌ40m (from โ‚ฌ139m last yearโ€™s) to โ‚ฌ99m. Our 6% traffic growth combined with a 4% rise in ave. fares led to an 11% increase in Revenues. Ancillary sales grew by 15% to โ‚ฌ286m (outpacing traffic growth) accounting for 22% of total revenues. Operating unit costs rose 10% as fuel increased 27% (by โ‚ฌ117m) to โ‚ฌ544m. Fuel amounted to 47% of total operating costs. We were hedged at $820 pt in Q1 last year compared to $1000 pt this year a price increase of 22%. As a result Q1 will suffer the largest fuel cost rise in FY13 as the pricing differential narrows significantly over the remaining three quarters of the year.

Q1 yield increases were dampened by the EU wide recession, austerity measures, and heavily discounted fares at our new base launches in Cyprus, Denmark, Hungary, Poland, Provincial UK and Spain. Excluding fuel, Q1 unit costs rose by 3%, as we rigorously controlled costs, despite a 2% rise in flight crew pay, higher charges at certain airports, and the impact on costs of stronger Sterling against the Euro.

Despite this challenging environment Ryanair continues to grow its traffic across Europe while maintaining the lowest unit costs in the airline industry, and generating healthy profits as evidenced by the 8% after tax margin achieved in the first quarter.

Our new bases (Billund, Budapest, Manchester, Palma, Paphos and Wroclaw) are enjoying high load factors, although some smaller bases such as Budapest, Warsaw and Wroclaw are doing so at very low fares. We announced our 51st base in Maastricht (Holland), which opens in December, and we plan to announce more new routes and up to 2 new bases later this year. We continue to see significant opportunities to grow across Europe as many airports aggressively compete to attract Ryanair’s traffic growth.

On July 1 the Spanish government more than doubled airport taxes at AENAโ€™s already high cost airports in Madrid and Barcelona, with smaller increases at other Spanish airports. These tax increases have already led to winter capacity cuts by Ryanair and many other airlines in Spain. These cuts will damage Spanish tourism and jobs in a country that already suffers up to 50% youth unemployment. It has been repeatedly proven that airport charges/tax increases lead to falling traffic, and the Spanish government must reverse these unjustified increases if they wish to grow Spainโ€™s tourism and generate new jobs.

Ryanair welcomes the UK Court of Appealโ€™s decision last week to dismiss the BAA/Ferrovial latest (7th) appeal against the 2008 Competition Commissionโ€™s recommendation that Stansted be sold to promote competition and the consumer interest. We now call on the UK Competition Commission to expedite the sale of Stansted. While BAA Stansted traffic declines (by 3% in June and 7% for H1 2012), both Heathrow and Gatwick have grown. We believe Stanstedโ€™s traffic decline can be reversed under new ownership which will lead to competition, lower charges, and improved passenger service at Stansted.

We are 90% hedged for FY13 at approx. $1000 pt, up 21% on last yearโ€™s price. We have recently hedged 50% of our H1 FY14 requirement at $940 pt, however these lower fuel prices will be more than offset by lower euro to dollar exchange rates. High oil prices and Europeโ€™s recession will drive further consolidation and more airline closures this winter. This will open more growth opportunities for Ryanair because we have the youngest, most fuel efficient fleet as well as the lowest fares and costs.

Our outlook remains cautious for the year. We expect full year traffic to grow 4% (7% in H1, and 1% in H2 due to winter capacity cuts). We expect positive yields will continue in Q2 and anticipate smaller fuel cost increases (due to higher Q2 comparable last year and fuel saving measures we have implemented). Currently, we have no visibility of next winterโ€™s yields but expect that continuing austerity, EU recession, and lower yields at new bases will restrain fare growth. Until we get some H2 yield visibility our guidance for FY 13 remains unchanged, in the range of โ‚ฌ400m to โ‚ฌ440m as previously guidedโ€.

Copyright Photo: Keith Burton. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCJ (msn 33564) approaches for landing at the London (Stansted) hub.

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