Connect with us

Published

on

Ryanair has reported a slump in quarterly profits and narrowed its expectations for annual earnings after some online travel sites stopped selling its flights.

The no-frills carrier said it made profit after tax of €15m (£12.8m) over the final three months of 2023, its third quarter, compared to the €211m it achieved in the same period a year previously.

A poll of analysts had expected a figure of €49m.

The sum came in lower despite a 7% rise in passenger numbers and fares being 13% higher.

Europe’s largest airline by passenger numbers blamed the decision by some booking sites, including booking.com and Kayak, to remove it from their listings in early December.

The airline’s boss Michael O’Leary had warned earlier this year that the move, by firms he described as “pirates”, had harmed third quarter profitability as it had forced Ryanair to cut fares to fill seats.

Another factor behind the slump in profits was a 35% increase in fuel bills.

More on Ryanair

Ryanair said it now expected an after-tax profit of between €1.85bn and €1.95bn for the 12 months to the end of March.

That is lower than its previous forecast of just over €2bn at the top of the range.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Ryanair boss: Passengers spared bookings ‘scam’

Shares fell by 3% on the update.

“While traffic and fares were ahead of prior year, close-in Christmas/New Year loads and yields were softer than previously expected as Ryanair lowered prices in response to the sudden (but welcome) removal of flights from OTA (online travel agent) pirate websites in early Dec,” Ryanair said in a statement.

Ryanair, which had accused some firms of imposing additional charges on its customers and had initiated legal proceedings, said the impact would be temporary.

Chief financial officer Neil Sorahan told Reuters news agency on Monday it was already beginning to “fizzle out”.

Mr O’Leary told investors one risk remaining to Ryanair’s growth prospects was the possibility of further delays in the delivery of new, more fuel efficient, Boeing 787 MAX 8 aircraft.

Read more from Sky News:
Post Office chairman ousted
Channel 4 to unveil deeper job cuts

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Ryanair has ‘confidence’ in Boeing

It expects to have seven fewer than anticipated in time for the summer peak and hopes MAX 10s will be with Ryanair during 2025.

Boeing was, last week, placed under manufacturing restrictions by US air regulators investigating the Alaska Airlines replacement door panel blowout of 5 January.

The measures prevent Boeing from increasing production rates.

“We continue to work closely with Boeing to minimise delivery delays and improve quality control in both Wichita and Seattle”, he said.

“While the recent MAX 9 grounding was a disappointing setback, we don’t expect it to affect the MAX 8 fleet or the MAX 10 certification.”

Continue Reading

Business

Thames Water investors to quit boards amid spectre of bailout

Published

on

By

Thames Water investors to quit boards amid spectre of bailout

Representatives of Thames Water’s multinational syndicate of shareholders are poised to quit as directors of its corporate entities after refusing to inject the billions of pounds of funding required to bail it out.

Sky News has learnt that a number of board members at companies connected to Kemble Water Finance, Thames’s parent, are expected to resign in the coming days.

City sources described the move as “the logical next step” after the owners of Britain’s biggest water utility said they would not commit more than £3bn to help upgrade its ageing infrastructure and shore up its debt-laden balance sheet.

A default on part of Thames Water‘s holding company debts last month has raised the prospect that the company is heading towards special administration, a form of insolvency that would effectively leave the government liable for managing a utility firm which serves nearly a quarter of Britain’s population.

Money latest:
Rainy day for iconic British brand as profits suffer

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Thames Water under threat

Thames Water is owned by a group of sovereign wealth funds and pension funds from countries including Abu Dhabi, Australia, Britain, Canada and China.

A number of the investors are represented on boards which sit at various points in the group’s labyrinthine capital structure.

It was unclear on Wednesday whether Michael McNicholas, a representative of the giant Canadian pension fund Omers and who sits on the board of Thames Water Utilities Limited, was among those in the process of stepping down.

Read more:
Directors hold crunch talks over utility’s future
Even bigger surge in bills proposed under new plans

Along with the rest of the privately owned water industry, Thames Water faces a crucial moment next month when Ofwat, the industry regulator, publishes its draft determination on companies’ five-year business plans.

The draft rulings will be subject to negotiation before final versions are published in December.

Thames Water and a spokesman for Kemble declined to comment.

Continue Reading

Business

Royal Mail ‘minded’ to accept £3.5bn takeover proposal by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky

Published

on

By

Royal Mail 'minded' to accept £3.5bn takeover proposal by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky

The owner of Royal Mail has said it is “minded” to accept a revised takeover bid by Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky.

The latest offer from Mr Kretinsky’s investment firm EP Group values the Royal Mail parent company International Distribution Services (IDS) at £3.5bn.

Money latest: UK economy in safe hands ‘whoever wins’ election, top bank chief says

Mr Kretinsky’s firm already owns most of IDS as a 27.6% shareholder but wishes to buy the remaining shares.

An earlier offer of £3.20 a share had been rejected last month for being too low.

But now he has offered to pay £3.60 for each share. The day before the original offer was made a share in IDS cost £2.14.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

An extra shareholder pay out of 8 pence a share has been offered by EP Group, if the deal closes, as has a 2 pence per share payment to every stakeholder, expected to be paid in September.

More on Royal Mail

It would bring the total value of an IDS share to 73% more than it cost before the prospect of a buyout was raised.

‘Good value’

“Having considered the proposal, the board has indicated to EP Group that it would be minded to recommend an offer to IDS shareholders”, the IDS board said.

The price is “fair” and reflects the value of current growth plans, the IDS chairman said.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Royal Mail could be allowed to deliver letters just three days per week, under a series of options outlined by the industry regulator.

Consideration was given by the board to the national significance of Royal Mail as the operator of the postal network.

“The board is particularly mindful of Royal Mail’s unique heritage and responsibilities as the designated universal service provider in the United Kingdom and a key part of national infrastructure”, it said.

In assessing the proposal, the board has also been very mindful of the impact on Royal Mail and GLS and their respective stakeholders and employees, as well as broader public interest factors”.

EP Group has until 29 May to advance or withdraw its takeover bid.

Who is Daniel Kretinsky?

There has already been scrutiny of Mr Kretinsky’s part ownership in the postal company but a government national security concerns review into his investment led to no intervention.

He also owns parts of West Ham Football Club and Sainsbury’s.

EP Group, which he controls, has financial interests in energy, logistics, and food retail.

Continue Reading

Business

West has ‘good hand in China economic battlefield but it doesn’t have to be war’

Published

on

By

West has 'good hand in China economic battlefield but it doesn't have to be war'

The boss of the world’s biggest bank has told Sky News that Western economies have a “good hand” in the “economic battlefield” with China but declared it does not have to be war.

In a wide-ranging interview with Sky’s Wilfred Frost, chief executive and chairman of JPMorgan Chase Jamie Dimon said the West was going to have a “hard time” as long as China had close ties with Russia.

But he said it was well placed due to the resilience of their collective economies and long-standing partnerships, such as NATO.

Money latest: Rainy day for iconic British brand as profits suffer

However, he warned of the dangers of fragmentation since Donald Trump, when US president, pulled out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership in 2017.

He also said that Joe Biden’s administration should have worked with allies over the effects of his Inflation Reduction Act.

The massive programme of incentives to bolster the green economy had the effect of taking investment out of Europe at a time when Russia’s war in Ukraine was dominating the agenda.

The bank boss warned too of a backlash from China over US tariffs against its electric cars and solar panels announced just this week, arguing that a joint approach from western powers over China more generally would carry more weight.

Mr Dimon, who has run JPMorgan since 2005 and is widely seen as the most influential boss of a financial services company in the United States, said: “We have competition with China.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Why is the US taking aim at China?

“I think the American government is doing the right thing to fully engage. That doesn’t mean the Chinese are going to like everything we do just like we don’t like everything they do but it doesn’t have to be war, it can be tough competition and we should be prepared for that.”

“The most important thing”, he added, “is that we do it together”.

“They’re not an enemy, you know, but they’re competing. They want a different world than we want. And I think they want a different world than we want in the Western world… it’s worth fighting for.”

“We all made a little bit of mistake in how we kind of expected them after WTO (World Trade Organisation) to become more Western and things like that. It’s okay. Don’t cry over spilled milk,” he concluded.

Mr Dimon was speaking 24 hours after the US-based bank, which has 22,000 staff and a 200-year history in the UK market, announced £40m in new investments to help connect young people and underserved communities to economic opportunities.

They followed the opening of a new tech centre in Glasgow.

JPMorgan Chase – perhaps best-known in this country for its Chase retail division – is the biggest bank in the world by market value with a capitalisation of almost $600bn (£475bn).

Mr Dimon, who was initially critical of Brexit following the UK’s split from the EU, spoke of the bank’s continuing commitment to the country having called the future of its UK operations into question in 2021.

Asked about the looming election, he said that talks with Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer had left him in no doubt that both the Conservatives and Labour were “pro business”.

He described how growing economies benefits everybody as it allows for investment.

“Everybody I heard… Conservative and Labour, (is) talking about growing the economy, technology, research and developments, simplifying regulations, making it easier for people to start businesses and grow businesses, making sure schools educate… those policies work,” he said.

Continue Reading

Trending