Ryanair trims forecast for passenger numbers again on Boeing delays

Ryanair again trimmed its forecast for passenger numbers on Boeing delivery delays.
Ryanair trims forecast for passenger numbers again on Boeing delays

Conor Humphries, Reuters

Ryanair reported after-tax profit for the three months to the end of December ahead of analyst forecasts on Monday, but Europe's largest low-cost carrier again trimmed its forecast for passenger numbers on Boeing delivery delays.

After tax-profit for the third quarter of Ryanair’s financial year was €149 million, well ahead of the €60 million profit forecast in a company poll of analysts.

That was mainly due to a better-than-expected 1 per cent increase in average fares in the quarter, compared to a fall of 7 per cent during the previous quarter, chief financial officer Neil Sorahan said.

Ryanair, which makes most of its profit during its summer season, said it was "cautiously guiding" after-tax profit for the 12 months to March 31st in a range of €1.55 billion to €1.61 billion.

Ryanair said it expects to take delivery of nine Boeing 737 MAX aircraft ahead of its peak summer season, fewer than expected, and as a result will cut its forecast for passenger numbers in the 12 months to March 31st, 2026, to 206 million from 210 million.

Sorahan, who recently returned from a trip to Boeing's production facilities in Seattle, said the delays were disappointing but that he had a "strong level of confidence," that the nine aircraft would arrive on time.

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