Ryanair profit guidance unchanged, Q1 profit falls 20pc as airline warns of rising costs and fight disruption

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  • Ryanair Q1 profits fall 20pc to €319m
  • Lower fares, higher fuel & pilot costs.
  • Full year guidance unchanged at €1.25bn – €1.35bn

Ryanair’s first-quarter profits fell 20pc due to rising fuel prices, lower fares and staff pay rises, and it warned of further disruption to passengers over the summer.
Growth slowed slightly to 7pc with passenger numbers up to 37.6 million and revenue up 9pc to €2.1bn Rising costs during the three-month period meant that after-tax profit slumped by 20pc to €319m, sending its shares down as much as 5pc in early trading.
The Swords-based airline blamed falling profits on a variety of factors including labour disputes which are expected to continue. It said average fares fell 4pc due to overcapacity in the European flight market, as well as the early timing of Easter, and said it had been unable to fully mitigate the impact of rising fuel prices. It said fuel was up from $50 a barrel last year to $80, an increase that was likely to cost the company €430m over the course of the year.
Ryanair has been dealing with unrest among its pilots and cabin crew, triggering strikes in Belgium, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain. This summer 600 flights have already been cancelled because of industrial action and Ryanair said their negotiations with unions were likely to force further disruption. “We have minimised the impact of these strikes on customers by cancelling a small proportion of our flight schedule, well in advance of the day of travel, to allow our customers to switch flights or apply for full refunds. While we continue to actively engage with pilot and cabin crew unions across Europe, we expect further strikes over the peak summer period as we are not prepared to concede to unreasonable demands that will compromise either our low fares or our highly efficient model.
Ryanair said it considered a “no-deal” Brexit, in which England leaves the European Union without agreement on matters such as trade, increasingly likely. “We remain concerned by the danger of a hard (“no-deal”) Brexit in March 2019. While there is a view that a 21-month transition agreement from March 2019 to December 2020 will be implemented (and extended), recent events in the UK political sphere have added to this uncertainty, and we believe that the risk of a hard Brexit is being underestimated.”

Airline statement in full:

Ryanair today (23 July) reported a 20pc fall in Q1 profits to €319m (excl. exceptionals).  Strong traffic growth (up 7pc), overcapacity in Europe, and the earlier timing of Easter led to a 4pc decline in ave. fares. Higher fuel and staff costs offset strong ancillary revenue growth in the quarter.
 

Q1 Results (IFRS) June 30, 2017 June 30, 2018 % Change
Guests (m) 35.0 37.6 +7pc
Revenue (m) €1,910 €2,079 +9pc
Profit after Tax (m)* €397 €319 -20pc
Net Margin 21pc 15pc -6pc
Basic EPS (euro cent) 32.66 26.62 -18pc

      * Excl. exceptional: 24.9pc (€9m) share of Associate LaudaMotion Q1 loss. 

Highlights

As previously guided, Q1 PAT fell by 20pc to €319m due to lower fares, the absence of half of Easter in the quarter, higher oil prices and pilot costs.  Traffic grew 7pc to 37.6m, despite over 2,500 flight cancellations caused by ATC staff shortages and ATC strikes. Ryanair’s lower fares delivered an industry leading 96pc load factor.

  • Traffic grew 7pc to 37.6m (LF 96pc)
  • Ave. fare fell 4pc to €38.68
  • Ancillary revenue rose 25pc
  • Ryanair Sun launched its summer charter programme in Poland
  • €265m returned to shareholders via buybacks

Revenues

We took delivery of 14 B737s in Q1 (bringing our fleet to over 440 units) and launched 239 new routes for S.2018.  Bookings are slightly ahead of last year, but at lower fares.  We continue to see overcapacity in the European market, with Germany in particular very price competitive this summer.  Q1 fares fell 4pc to under €39 and we expect this weaker pricing environment (due to the World Cup, the Northern European heat wave and customer uncertainty about pilot strikes) to continue.  Our investment in Labs and AGB continues to drive improvements in ancillary revenue to 30pc of total revenue in Q1.  Key drivers of this growth was improved conversion of reserved seating and priority boarding services.  Ryanair’s digital platform now has over 1bn visits p.a. and continues to grow.

Costs

Ryanair has significantly lower costs per passenger than our competitors.  Fuel prices have risen substantially from $50pbl at this time last year to almost $80pbl in Q1.  While we are 90pc hedged at $58pbl our unhedged balance will see our full year fuel bill increase by at least €430m (incl. additional volumes).  We recently hedged 35pc of H1 FY20 at $69pbl.  Q1 staff costs increased by 34pc primarily due to pilot 20pc pay increases, 9pc more flight hours and a 3pc general pay increase for our non-flight staff.  EU-261 “right-to-care” costs jumped 40pc in Q1 due to over 2,500 ATC flight cancellations in Q1.  For the remainder of FY19, we will continue to invest in our people, our systems, and our business as we scale up to take delivery of 210 MAX-200s (“Gamechangers”). These aircraft have 4pc more seats and 16pc lower fuel cost, and we expect them to deliver material unit cost reductions from FY21 onward when we start to retire older B737-800s.

Balance Sheet.

Our operations continue to be strongly cash generative.  Capex of €460m and shareholder distributions of €265m in the quarter were financed from strong cash flows while still cutting net debt from €283m in March to €259m at end June.  Our €750m share buyback programme is 70pc complete, at an average price of €15.90.  When complete later this year, we will have returned over €6bn to our shareholders since 2008.

Strikes and staff shortages

Repeated ATC staff shortages (mainly in UK, Germany & Greece) and strikes (France) are causing widespread damage to airline schedules this summer.  French ATC, the worst offenders, went on strike for 9 of the 13 weekends during April, May and June leading to thousands of cancelled flights.  Ryanair cancelled over 2,500 flights (approx. 450,000 guests) in Q1, with a loss of higher yielding weekend traffic, and a steep rise in EU261 “right-to-care” costs. Punctuality was severely damaged (with only 75pc of Q1 flights on-time compared to 89pc last year).  Ryanair and other airlines have initiated legal action against the French Government to keep Europe’s skies open during these unacceptably frequent French ATC disruptions.  Ryanair and A4E (Airlines for Europe) are campaigning for the European Commission to take control of the upper air space so that overflights, at least, are not disrupted during national ATC strikes.  This does not remove the “right to strike” but does confine more of the impact of strikes to the actual country where the strike occurs (i.e. France).  Regrettably, the European Commission remains slow to act on these measures and we call again on the EU to act decisively to minimise the impact of ATC disruptions to EU consumers and their families this summer.

Fuel price and consumption.

With fuel at $80pbl (up from $50pbl last year), some weaker, unhedged, European airlines are suffering a significant cash flow squeeze and/or are close to breaching debt covenants.  We expect this will lead to further airline failures and consolidation this winter, which will provide growth opportunities, hopefully at stronger yields for Ryanair’s low fares/low cost model.

Strikes & union recognition

In recent months we implemented a series of initiatives to make Ryanair more attractive to pilots and cabin crew, including (a) a 20pc pay increase under 5-year pay agreements which makes our pilots significantly better paid than competitor (Norwegian & Jet2) B737 pilots; (b) we cut training/bonding costs for new pilot and cabin crew recruits; (c) we facilitated over 700 pilot transfers to their preferred base; (d) we invested heavily in new simulators and in house training capacity; and, (e) we announced we would recognise trade unions.
Despite signing pilot and cabin crew union recognition agreements in our major markets (the UK and Italy, and a recent agreement in Germany for cabin crew), progress has been slower in smaller markets where competitor pilots are impeding both progress and process.  We suffered 2 unnecessary strikes by a small minority (25pc) of Irish based pilots in July (with a 3rd strike threatened for 24 July).  Cabin crew have also threatened strikes in Spain, Portugal, and Belgium on 25 & 26 July.  We have minimised the impact of these strikes on customers by cancelling a small proportion of our flight schedule, well in advance of the day of travel, to allow our customers to switch flights or apply for full refunds. While we continue to actively engage with pilot and cabin crew unions across Europe, we expect further strikes over the peak summer period as we are not prepared to concede to unreasonable demands that will compromise either our low fares or our highly efficient model.
If these unnecessary strikes continue to damage customer confidence and forward prices/yields in certain country markets then we will have to review our winter schedule, which may lead to fleet reductions at disrupted bases and job losses in markets where competitor employees are interfering in our negotiations with our people and their unions. We cannot allow our customers flights to be unnecessarily disrupted by a tiny minority of pilots.

Brexit poses ownership issue.

We remain concerned by the danger of a hard (“no-deal”) Brexit in March 2019.  While there is a view that a 21-month transition agreement from March 2019 to December 2020 will be implemented (and extended), recent events in the UK political sphere have added to this uncertainty, and we believe that the risk of a hard Brexit is being underestimated.  It is likely that in the event of a hard Brexit our British shareholders will be treated as non-EU.  We may be forced to restrict the voting rights of all non-EU shareholders in the event of a hard Brexit, to ensure that Ryanair remains majority owned and controlled by EU shareholders.  We have applied for a London AOC to protect our domestic UK routes and hope to receive it before the end of 2018.

Guidance remains €1.25bn to €1.35bn.

We continue to guide FY19 PAT in a range of €1.25bn to €1.35bn.  While Q1 fares were marginally stronger than previously expected, the recent weaker fare environment and the expected impact of crew strikes on forward pricing mean that Q2 fares will only rise by approx. 1pc (previously guided +4pc).  With almost zero H2 visibility, our H2 guidance of broadly flat fares remains unchanged at this time.  Ancillary revenue continues to perform well but will not offset a €430m higher fuel bill or a 6pc increase in ex-fuel unit costs. This guidance is heavily dependent on close-in Q2 fares, crew strikes, continuing ATC staff shortages/strikes, the absence of unforeseen security events and no negative Brexit developments.

Laudamotion investment to increase.

LaudaMotion is not included in this guidance.  We hope to increase our investment from 24.9pc to 75pc over the coming weeks having just received EU competition approval to do so. However, current trading for LaudaMotion has been adversely impacted by lower than expected S.2018 fares due to the late release of LaudaMotion schedules, and considerable damage caused by Lufthansa who have refused to pay invoices, delivered 9 instead of 14 aircraft at lease rates that are substantially above market rates, and recently attempted to trigger a contract termination so it could give these aircraft to a competitor airline, Eurowings, in a clear breach of Lufthansa’s competition commitments to the EU following its purchase of Air Berlin. In addition, LaudaMotion faces substantial cost headwinds especially in fuel, where it is unhedged and exposed to recent higher oil prices of close to $80pbl. We now expect LaudaMotion will lose approx. €150m in its first very difficult year, but these results will improve substantially to break even by year 3 of operations.”

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