Ryanair steels for winter 'write-off' as travel gloom
deepens
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[September 09, 2020]
By Conor Humphries and Laurence Frost
DUBLIN/PARIS (Reuters) - Ryanair <RYA.I> slashed its annual passenger
target by another 10 million on Wednesday, becoming the latest European
airline to signal more capacity cuts as resurgent COVID-19 infections
and travel restrictions dent recovery hopes.
"The winter of 2020 will be a write-off," Ryanair Group Chief Executive
Michael O'Leary predicted in an interview. Europe's biggest low-cost
carrier is preparing to close some bases and shrink others, he told
Reuters.
Airlines have blamed an uneven patchwork of travel restrictions and
quarantine rules across Europe for a stop-go recovery that has proven
tougher than many expected.
Ryanair's low-cost rival easyJet <EZJ.L>, already cutting 4,500 jobs and
closing three UK bases, further reduced its flying schedule for the
current quarter on Tuesday.
And Wizz Air <WIZZ.L>, which had touted an aggressive push for market
share and even a new London Gatwick base, last week scaled down
operations for the current quarter to 60% of capacity from the
previously expected 80%.
Overall, September short-haul schedules have been cut to 43% of European
capacity from 47.6% in August, Barclays analyst Rishika Savjani said -
and that only tells part of the story.
"We think demand is tracking below these levels, and therefore we'd
expect weaker load factors and weaker pricing for the quarter," Savjani
said in a Tuesday note, referring to a key metric for the proportion of
aircraft seats filled.
"Pricing is going to be aggressively down" in coming months, the Ryanair
boss said. O'Leary was among the first CEOs to warn of a virus-induced
price war in comments since borne out by a recovering Chinese market,
where some carriers now offer all-you-can-fly deals.
Ryanair now expects to fly 50 million passengers in the fiscal year to
March, one-third of the previous year's number. The goal was previously
cut to 60 million in July from 80 million in May and could go lower
still, O'Leary cautioned.
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Ryanair planes are seen at Dublin Airport, following the outbreak of
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Dublin, Ireland, May 1, 2020.
REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff/File Photo
"We're probably looking at closing more bases and withdrawing more capacity in
those countries where you're operating completely defective and non-scientific
quarantines," he added - citing Britain, Ireland, Spain and Portugal.
Fourteen-day Western European infection rates that have risen to 64.9 per
100,000 from 19.4 in late July are "not reflected in share prices", with airline
stocks up 14% over the period, Goodbody analyst Mark Simpson warned.
Behind the cutback announcements, Ryanair and Wizz remain relatively well
positioned over traditional airlines with more "exposure to high-risk long-haul
markets", Simpson said.
Further setbacks may leave legacy carriers like Air France-KLM <AIR.PA> and
Lufthansa <LHAG.DE> in need of yet more funding on top of their
multibillion-euro state-backed bailouts, other analysts warn. Air France needs a
strong recovery to avoid the looming prospect of nationalisation.
O'Leary, who last week bolstered Ryanair's already strong balance sheet with a
400 million-euro share issue, remains confident the Irish no-frills carrier can
come out on top.
"Our rivals have withdrawn huge amounts of capacity," he said. "The competitive
landscape if anything is getting easier."
(Reporting by Conor Humphries and Laurence Frost; editing by Jason Neely and
Mark Potter)
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