European airlines defy oil hikes to post rising profits

Published: 23 August 2005 y., Tuesday

Rising profits for British Airways and its lowcost rival Easyjet means that two of Europe's biggest airlines are riding high despite soaring fuel costs. BA, Europe's second largest carrier, has reported a 36 percent rise in first quarter profits. And chief executive Rod Eddington says he expects revenue for the year to March two thousand and six to grow by five and a half to six and a half, a percentage point up on previous forecasts. This is despite an annual fuel bill of 754 million euros, 15 percent up on an earlier forecast.

The excess has been offset by cost savings, fuel surcharges, and growth in first- and business class travel. Lowcost carrier Easyjet said its pretax profits were also likely to exceed earlier expectations at 90 million euros, matching its figure for last year. Earlier this week its lowcost rival Ryanair also beat forecasts with record first quarter profits, achieved without imposing fuel surcharges. The price of oil has risen by more than 40 percent since the start of the year, hitting airlines particularly hard.

Šaltinis: euronews.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Budget deficit lands Poland in hot water

Poland has received a dressing down from the European Commission more »

Asian banks express strong interest in Parex banka

First Asian targeted syndicated loan in history of Baltic banking signed by Parex banka more »

A Detailed Plan of Action

UKRAINIAN GOVERNMENT WANTS TO CONTEST 3,000 PRIVATIZATIONS IN COURT more »

Flash Inter-Bank Payment Network Expands to Six Countries

The clients of five more banks from the HVB Group have been included in the FlashPayment system of money transfer enlarging the inter-bank network to a total of 19 banks in Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuanian, Russia and Ukraine more »

Russia Could Block Siemens Takeover

Russia's antitrust authority signaled Tuesday that it might block a bid by German industrial giant Siemens to take a controlling stake in a strategic engineering company, citing national security concerns more »

The Growth Trend

Raiffeisen Bank Polska (RBP) closed 2004 with a record net profit of zł.165.4 billion which is almost double the 2003 figure more »

Polish Bonds Rise

Polish bonds rose more than any other government-debt securities after a report showed inflation slowed the most since May more »

RUSSIA, IRAN CREATE BUSINESS COUNCIL

The chambers of commerce and industry of Russia and Iran have created a Russia-Iran Business Council more »

Bulgaria's Govt Debt Short of EUR 8 B End-2004

Bulgaria's government and government-guaranteed debt stood at EUR 7.95 B at the end of December 2004, with foreign debt accounting for 82.8% of it, the finance ministry announced more »

Ahern lauds Polish workers in Ireland

Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern said yesterday that opening Ireland's job market to workers from Poland, when it joined the European Union on May 1 last year, has "worked out well" for both countries more »