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Τρίτη 17 Μαΐου 2022

RYANAIR REPORTS FULL YEAR LOSS OF €355M: TRAFFIC RECOVERS STRONGLY TO 97M BUT AT LOWER FARES


 Ryanair Holdings today (16 May) reported a full year loss of €355m (pre-exceptionals), compared to a PY loss of €1,015m. 

 

FY end

31 Mar. 2021

31 Mar. 2022

Change

Customers

27.5m

97.1m

+253%

Load Factor

71%

82%

+11pts

Revenue

€1.64bn

€4.80bn

+193%

Op. Costs

€2.48bn

€5.27bn*

+113%

Net Loss

(€1,015m)

(€355m)*

n/m

* Non-IFRS financial measure, excl. €114m except. unrealised mark-to-market net gain on jet fuel caps.

 

During FY22:

  • Ryanair’s CDP[1]climate protection rating improved from “B-” to “B”.
  • Sustainalytics[2] ranked Ryanair the No.1 EU airline & No.2 World airline for ESG.
  • Traffic recovered strongly to 97.1m from 27.5m.  (Still 35% behind pre-Covid)
  • Ave. fares fell 27% to just €27 due to Covid, Omicron & the Ukraine invasion.
  • 61 B737-8200 “Gamechangers” delivered up to 31 Mar. (500 SH aircraft at year-end).
  • 770 new routes & 15 new bases were announced for the coming year.
  • Fuel well hedged at significant discount to spot prices (FY23 80%; H1 FY24 10%).
  • S.22 capacity at 115% of S.19 (pre-Covid) levels – but recovery is ‘fragile’.

 

Ryanair’s Michael O’Leary, said:

 

ENVIRONMENT:

“Every consumer who switches to Ryanair from EU legacy airlines can cut their CO₂ emissions by up to 50% per flight.  Over the coming 5-years we expect our traffic to grow by 50% to 225m p.a.  This growth will be delivered at lower fares but on a fleet of new B737“Gamechanger” aircraft, which offer 4% more seats, yet burns 16% less fuel and reduce noise emissions by 40%. 

 

Our work with the EU, fuel suppliers, and aircraft manufacturers to accelerate sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) supply continues, in partnership with Trinity College’s Sustainable Aviation Research Centre.  Ryanair hopes to power up to 12.5% of our flights using SAF and cut our CO₂ per pax/km by 10% to under 60 grams by 2030.  Last month we announced a partnership with Neste to power up to one third of our flights from Schiphol (Amsterdam) with a 40% SAF blend.  We expect to establish similar partnerships across our network over the coming years.  We are working with A4E and the EU to accelerate reform of the Single European Sky, to promote ATC efficiency and cut delays which will reduce fuel consumption, CO₂ emissions and flight delays.  

 

Ryanair published our “Aviation with Purpose” sustainability report setting ambitious environmental and social targets over the coming decade and mapping out Ryanair’s path to net carbon zero by 2050.  Our environmental strategy has enabled CDP to upgrade Ryanair’s climate protection rating to B from B- in Dec. 2021.  Our goal remains to achieve an “A” rating within the next 2 years.  Last month, Sustainalytics improved Ryanair’s ESG rankings to No.1 airline in Europe and the No.2 globally. 

 

SOCIAL:

Our growth plans to 2026 will see Ryanair create over 6,000 well-paid jobs for highly skilled aviation professionals all over Europe.  Last autumn Ryanair invested €50m in a cutting-edge Aviation Skills Training Centre in Dublin and we plan to invest over €100m in 2 more, high skills, training centres (one in the Iberian Peninsula and one in CEE) during this period.  To facilitate this growth, Ryanair ordered up to 8 CAE full flight simulators (at a value of over $80m) and the first of these new sims delivers this summer.  We have also invested in new hangar maintenance facilities in Kaunas and Shannon and agreed a 5-year maintenance contract with Joramco in Jordan.

 

Despite the recent disruption of our traffic recovery by both the Omicron variant and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we remain committed to restoring the pay cuts we agreed with our people during the Covid shut downs.  We have made some progress with pilots and cabin crew in certain markets on partial restorations in 2022.  But, in other markets the slow pace of union negotiations have hindered this acceleration of similar restorations.  We remain committed to delivering the first tranche of our agreed 3-year restoration plan as agreed in July 2022 and we are prepared to accelerate years 2 and 3 into one restoration in July 2023 if Ryanair returns to pre-Covid load factors and profitability during y.e. Mar. 2023.  We are committed to the full pay restoration for all our people as soon as our business returns to pre-Covid profitability.

 

The Ryanair Customer Panel met twice over the last year, providing valuable insights and constructive suggestions to improve our customer service.  We have implemented many of these suggestions, including a Day of Travel service in the Ryanair App which assists our guests with live updates through every step of their  journey, a new travel wallet for accelerated refunds and an online self-service hub.  Later this summer we will introduce more service improvements, including auto check-in and airport express to facilitate faster journeys through airports. Our winning formula of the lowest fares, the most on-time flights, industry lowest CO₂ emissions and friendly customer service saw Ryanair’s customer satisfaction (“CSAT”) scores rise significantly in FY22.

 

EU OWNERSHIP & CONTROL:

Ryanair’s EU ownership has increased from approx. 32% at 31 Mar. 2021 to approx. 41% at 31 Mar. 2022.  In the wake of Brexit, and the treatment of UK nationals as non-EU shareholders from 1 Jan. 2021, Ryanair has worked hard to grow its EU shareholder base.  During the past year, Ryanair increased its EU investor relations activity, delisted from the London Stock Exchange, and forced sell downs where non-EU investors incorrectly (post 1 Jan. 2021) purchased ordinary shares instead of ADRs (listed on NASDAQ) and who subsequently failed to comply with a Ryanair issued disposal notice.  Such actions, coupled with a suspension of voting rights of non-EU shareholders, enable Ryanair to protect its EU airline licenses post-Brexit.  We expect these voting restrictions will remain in place for the near-term future until a 50%+ EU shareholding is restored, or the EU and UK agree a less restrictive airline ownership and control regime than the current 50%+ nationality rule (which dates back to the 1940s).

 

GROWTH:

Over the past year our New Route team continued to work with airport partners to negotiate lower costs, Covid recovery incentives and growth deals.  In addition to 15 new bases (Agadir, Billund, Chania, Corfu, Cork, Madeira, Newcastle, Nuremberg, Riga, Stockholm, Venice (Marco-Polo), Venice (Treviso), Turin, Zadar & Zagreb), 770 new routes were announced and low-cost long term growth deals were extended at London Stansted (to 2028), Milan Bergamo (2028), Manchester (2028), East Midlands (2028) and Brussels Charleroi (2030).  Our Group has doubled its capacity in Rome (FCO), Lisbon, Vienna and has based a record 33 aircraft in Dublin for S.22, launching our biggest ever Dublin summer schedule.  

 

The Covid-19 crisis accelerated the collapse of many European airlines including Flybe, Norwegian, Germanwings, Level, Stobart and material capacity cuts at many others including Alitalia (now ITA), TAP, LOT, SAS, etc.  The tsunami of State Aid from EU Govts. to their insolvent flag carriers (Alitalia, Air France/KLM, Iberia, LOT, Lufthansa, SAS, TAP and others) will distort EU competition and prop up high cost, inefficient, flag carriers for some years.  Ryanair was one of very few airlines during the Covid crisis to place significant new aircraft orders, to expand our airport partnerships, secure lower costs so that we can pass on even lower fares on many new routes during the post Covid recovery.  Over the past 2 years, Ryanair’s market share has increased markedly across Europe.  Notable examples include Italy where our market share increased from c.30% (pre-Covid) to almost 40% this summer.  Market share in Vienna has jumped from 8% (S.19) to 21% (S.22).  In Budapest (a competitor’s home base) we have gone from 18% to over 30% (and market leadership), Ireland rose from 49% to over 55%, Sweden doubled to 12% and Poland has grown from 25% to 35%.

 

Up to March 2022, Ryanair has taken delivery of 61 B737-8200 “Gamechanger” aircraft and we hope to increase this to over 70 new aircraft for peak S.22 (more than the 65 previously targeted) to facilitate S.22 recovery and growth opportunities.  This Summer, our capacity will grow to approx. 115% of S.19 (pre-Covid) levels although we expect to fill these flights with lower fares and at higher fuel costs than pre-Covid.  Our new, fuel efficient, “Gamechangers” widen the cost gap between Ryanair and all other European airlines for the next decade.  Their operational reliability, lower fuel consumption and CO₂ emissions have so far exceeded expectations, with very positive feedback from both passengers and our crews.  Based on our 210 order book and available fleet capacity, the Ryanair Group plans to accelerate traffic growth over the next 5 years.  From a pre-Covid figure of 149m, we now expect to grow (by 50%) to over 225m guests p.a. by FY26. 

 

FY22 BUSINESS REVIEW:

 

Revenue & Costs

FY22 scheduled revenues increased 156% to €2.65bn.  While traffic recovered strongly from 27.5m to 97.1m guests, the delayed relaxation of EU Covid-19 travel restrictions until July 2021 (Oct. in the case of the UK Govt.), combined with the damaging impact of the Omicron variant and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in H2, meant that fares required significant price stimulation.  Ave. fares in FY22 were down 27% to just €27.  Ancillary revenue delivered a solid performance, generating more than €22 per passenger as traffic recovered and guests increasingly chose priority boarding and reserved seating.  Total revenues increased by over 190% to €4.80bn.  

 

While sectors increased almost 200% and traffic rose 253%, operating costs rose just 113% to €5.27bn (incl. a notable 237% increase in fuel to €1.83bn), driven primarily by lower variable costs such as airport & handling, route charges and lower fuel burn as 61xB737 Gamechangers entered the fleet (offset by the higher cost jet fuel).  Lower costs, coupled with rising load factors, saw FY22 (ex-fuel) unit cost per passenger reduce to €35. 

 

Our FY23 fuel needs are approx. 80% hedged (65% jet swaps at c.$63bbl and 15% caps at c.$78bbl).  Almost 10% of Ryanair’s H1 FY24 fuel requirements are hedged at c.$76bbl (via jet swaps). Carbon credits are 85% hedged for FY23 at €53 (well below the current spot price of almost €90).  This very strong fuel hedge position gives Ryanair a considerable competitive advantage for the next 12 months and will enable us to grow market share strongly over the coming year.

 

Balance Sheet & Liquidity

Ryanair’s balance sheet is one of the strongest in our industry with a BBB (stable) credit rating (S&P and Fitch).  Year-end net debt fell to €1.45bn (prior year €2.28bn), and over 90% of the Group’s fleet of B737 aircraft are unencumbered.  We plan to reduce this net debt to zero over the next 2 years, despite peak capex during that time.  The strength of Ryanair’s balance sheet ensures that the Group is well poised to capitalise rapidly on the many growth opportunities that exist in Europe into the post Covid-19 recovery this year and beyond.

 

OUTLOOK:

While bookings have improved in recent weeks, the booking curve remains much closer-in than was typical (pre-Covid) at this time of year.  The damaging impact of the Omicron variant, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in Feb. means that Q1 pricing continues to need stimulation.  There is, however, pent-up demand and we are cautiously optimistic that peak S.22 fares will be somewhat ahead of peak S.19 (pre-Covid) levels.  Ryanair plans to grow FY23 traffic to 165m (up from 97m in FY22 and 149m pre-Covid) and will pursue its load active, yield passive strategy to achieve this growth.  While 80% of Ryanair’s fuel requirements are hedged well below current spot prices of over $100bbl, our unhedged 20% will give rise to some unbudgeted cost increases.

 

Despite limited H1 visibility (and almost zero H2 visibility), 20% unhedged fuel and the significant risks posed by both the invasion of Ukraine and Covid, we hope to return to reasonable profitability in FY23.  This recovery, however, remains fragile.  This was clearly evidenced by the sudden, and unexpected, emergence of the Omicron variant pre-Christmas and the Russian invasion of Ukraine in Feb., both of which immediately damaged close-in bookings and yields for the Christmas and Easter peak travel periods.  Given the continuing risk of adverse news flows on both these topics, it is impractical (if not impossible) to provide a sensible or accurate profit guidance range at this time”.


Tags: Ryanair Holdings