par EasyJet (isin : GB00B7KR2P84)
Trading Update for the six months ended 31 March 2024
easyJet plc (EZJ) 18 April 2024
easyJet plc (‘easyJet’)
easyJet Trading Update for the six months ended 31 March 2024
easyJet reduces winter losses by >£50 million year-on-year as demand for our flights and holidays continues to build well for summer
Summary easyJet has reduced its first half “seasonal” losses, with headline loss before tax expected to be between £340 and £360 million. This improvement was driven by targeted capacity growth where demand was strongest, alongside productivity and utilisation benefits which enabled ex-fuel unit costs to remain flat year-on-year. The result was achieved despite headwinds from fuel cost (per seat inflation of +6%) and the conflict in the Middle East which resulted in a direct impact2 of c. £40 million in H1’24. Flying into Israel has now been suspended for the summer with this limited capacity (c.0.3% of planned summer flying) being redeployed across the network. We continue to drive growth at easyJet holidays, with £31 million of profit before tax (+206% compared to H1’23) and 42% customer growth year-on-year.
Easter demand was particularly strong, benefitting March due to its early timing. Operational performance was good with peak daily flights broadly in line with summer levels. On-Time Performance (OTP) over Easter improved year-on-year as a result of easyJet’s targeted resilience actions.
Bookings for summer 2024 continue to build well, with an increase in volume and pricing compared to the same period last year, underpinned by strong demand for easyJet’s primary airport network. Q3’24 currently has c. 60% of the program sold, +1ppt and Q4’24 is c. 30% sold, +2 ppts year-on-year. easyJet holidays has currently sold 70% of the plan for this summer.
Johan Lundgren, CEO of easyJet, said: “The importance that consumers place on travel coupled with easyJet’s trusted brand has driven good demand for our flights and holidays. Our growth and focus on productivity have reduced winter losses by more than £50 million. “We have further enhanced our network with the launch of new bases in Alicante and Birmingham providing greater choice for consumers across Europe. “We are well set up operationally for this summer season where we expect easyJet to be one of the fastest growing major airlines in Europe and take more customers on easyJet holidays than ever before.” Fuel & FX Hedging
Capacity
During Q2 easyJet flew 19.3 million seats, in line with guidance, a 9% increase on the same period last year when easyJet flew 17.7 million seats. Load factor was 87% (Q2 FY23: 88%).
Passenger1 numbers in the quarter increased to 16.8 million (Q2 FY23: 15.6 million).
Revenue, Cost and Liquidity Total group revenue and headline costs for the first half are expected to be around £3,270 million and around £3,620 million respectively. Pricing was very strong at the start of the period, with October seeing RPS of +12% year-on-year. However, the onset of the conflict in the Middle East on 7 October resulted in a pause in flights to Israel and Jordan and a temporary slowdown in flight bookings for the wider industry. Demand and bookings recovered strongly from late November with the second quarter seeing RPS of +8% year-on-year, supported in part due to the start of Easter holidays falling into March.
Our focus on increased productivity and utilisation offset inflationary cost pressure, which all airlines and the wider supply chain continue to see. This resulted in non-fuel unit costs being flat year-on-year, as previously guided. easyJet continues to have one of the strongest investment grade balance sheets in European Aviation (Baa2, stable, by Moody's and BBB, positive, by Standard & Poor's). As at 31 March 2024 our net cash position was c.£146 million (31 December 2023 net debt: £485 million). easyJet repaid a €500 million Eurobond which matured in October 2023 and then on 20 March 2024 easyJet issued an €850 million bond with a coupon of 3.750%, maturing in 2031.
Financing costs benefitted from a decrease in gross debt and a rise in the interest rate on floating-rate cash deposits. However, foreign exchange movements over the period resulted in a non-operational, non-cash FX loss of £6 million from balance sheet revaluations.
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