LUCKY RYANAIR CUSTOMER BAGS €100,000 IN ‘WIN A MILLION’ GAME
15 Apr 2022
AFTER PURCHASE OF €2 CHARITY SCRATCH CARD ON A RYANAIR FLIGHT
Ryanair, Europe’s no. 1 airline, today (15 April) announced the lucky winner of its annual ‘Win A Million’ event who walked away with a whopping €100,000 cash prize. Longstanding Ryanair customer, Laura Mereacre, visited Ryanair’s HQ in Dublin with her husband and two children to play for a life changing sum of €1m, having bought a winning €2 Ryanair charity scratch card on a flight to Portugal earlier this year.
Ms. Mereacre purchased the €2 ticket to help make a difference and support a range of Ryanair charities across Europe including Naomi House & Jacksplace in the UK, The Jack & Jill Foundation in Ireland, Make A Wish Italy, Kinderhilfe Germany, Fundação Do Gil Portugal and many more.
Ryanair’s Director of Marketing, Dara Brady said:
“We were thrilled to welcome Laura and her family to Ireland and having walked away with €100K – Ireland truly is the land of a thousand welcomes! The atmosphere was electric, and Laura had everyone gripped as she played for the big €1m prize.
Through the sale of our scratch cards – which to date has generated over €10m – Ryanair has continuously supported incredible causes across Europe. Every year our generous customers purchase Ryanair scratch cards with the aim of giving back – so make sure to grab a scratch card on your next Ryanair flight, and be in for the chance to win €1m.”
Lucky winner, Laura said:
“This has been an amazing experience that I’m delighted to be a part of. Words can’t describe how lucky and blessed I feel by this amazing opportunity. When I purchased this scratch card on a Ryanair flight to Portugal, I never imagined myself as the lucky winner of €100,000. I’m looking forward to celebrating my winnings with my family who are here with me today, my friends back home and paying off my mortgage. Who knows, I may even open my own bakery one day – a huge passion of mine!
I’m very proud to have supported Ryanair, who in turn support the great work of so many charities who work with life-limited and life threatened children and young adults, as well as with their families.”
Ryanair Updates FY22 Guidance New Range Of -€350m To -€400m (Prev. -€250m To -€450m)
04 Apr 2022
Ryanair Holdings plc today (4 April) briefed the market that it expects to report a pre-exceptional FY22 (yr. ended 31 Mar. 2022) net loss of between -€350m and -€400m (previously guided range of -€250m to -€450m). The Ryanair Group’s full-year traffic recovered strongly to over 97m (27.5m in FY21, but below pre-Covid traffic of 149m).
Ryanair’s balance sheet is one of the strongest in our sector with a BBB (stable) credit rating (S&P and Fitch). Year end (31 Mar.) net debt dropped to €1.5bn (prior year €2.3bn), and c.90% of the Group’s fleet of B737 aircraft are unencumbered.
Since our last market update on 31 Jan., Ryanair has increased FY23 (yr. ended 31 Mar. 2023) fuel hedging to 80% cover (c.65% jet swaps at $630 and 15% caps at $775 per metric tonne). Almost 10% of Ryanair’s H1 FY24 fuel requirements are hedged at $760 (via jet swaps).
As this is a closed period, the Ryanair Group’s next market update will be on 16 May when we release FY22 results.
Ryanair March Traffic Rises To 11.2m Guests
04 Apr 2022
Ryanair Holdings plc today (Mon, 4 Apr) released March traffic statistics as follows:
MAR 2021
MAR 2022
TRAFFIC
0.5m
11.2m2
L. FACTOR
77%
87%
Ryanair operated over 67,800 flights in March with an 87% load factor.
Rolling Annual
TRAFFIC
27.5m
97.1m
L. FACTOR
71%
82%
PRIOR MONTHS
GUESTS
LOAD FACTOR
October
11.3m
84%
November
10.2m
86%
December
9.5m1
81%
January
7.0m1
79%
February
8.7m1
86%
March
11.2m2
87%
1 Dec, Jan & Feb traffic was badly affected by Omicron restrictions.
2 Mar traffic was impacted by the Russian invasion of Ukraine which caused 2,000 flights to/from Ukraine to be cancelled in March due to airspace closures.
Ryanair Aims To Become Carbon Neutral By 2050
21 Mar 2022
With Its Decarbonisation Strategy – Pathway To Net Zero
Ryanair today (21 Mar) announced its decarbonisation strategy – Pathway to Net Zero. Developed to reduce its carbon emissions and the impact of its operations on the environment, this strategy outlines four core strategic pillars underpinning the airline’s ambitious goal of net carbon zero by 2050:
34% decarbonisation through the increased use of sustainable aviation fuels (SAF)
32% decarbonisation through technological & operational improvements
24% decarbonisation through offsetting & other economic measures
10% decarbonisation through the introduction of better Air Traffic Management
With more than 1/3 of its decarbonisation to come from the increased use of SAF, Ryanair is working with the EU and fuel suppliers to accelerate supply of SAF. As part of this, Ryanair established the Ryanair Sustainable Aviation Research Centre in partnership with Trinity College Dublin. This partnership will deliver research in SAF, Zero Carbon Aircraft Propulsion Systems and Noise Mapping.
Ryanair will continue to invest in new technology, aircraft, as underpinned by its $22bn commitment to purchase 210 Boeing 737-8200 ‘Gamechanger’ aircraft. To date the airline has taken delivery of 55 ‘Gamechanger’ aircraft, which carry 4% more passengers, reduces fuel consumption & CO2 by 16% and lowers noise emissions by 40%.
The final leg of Ryanair’s Pathway to Net Zero will come from a combination of offsetting measures, through carbon capture offset projects and the support of key govt policies and reforms, such as the introduction of the Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR) initiative. If successfully introduced by the European Commission, the SESAR would deliver a standardised and more efficient air traffic management process, delivering a significant & immediate 10% reduction in European aviation carbon emissions.
Ryanair’s Director of Sustainability, Thomas Fowler, said:
“As Europe’s greenest major airline, Ryanair understands that aviation plays a pivotal role in tackling climate change and our Pathway to Net Zero will help us do just that.
We are working tirelessly with our team and strategic partners to lead the way in making aviation more sustainable. We were delighted to be upgraded to a ‘B’ rating by the CDP[i] this year, recognising our commitment to reducing our environmental impact. While we’ve already come a long way, we will continue to lead the sustainable aviation agenda in European aviation as we embark on our ambitious Pathway to Net Zero by 2050.”
[i] CDP (Carbon Disclosure Project) is an independent, non-profit, global environmental reporting organisation.
Ryanair January Traffic Rises To 7.0m Guests
02 Feb 2022
Ryanair Holdings plc today (Wed, 2 Feb) released January traffic statistics as follows:
JAN 2021
JAN 2022
TRAFFIC
1.3m
7.0m*
L. FACTOR
69%
79%
Ryanair operated over 46,400 flights in January with a 79% load factor.
PREVIOUS MONTHS
GUESTS
LOAD FACTOR
July
9.3m
80%
August
11.1m
82%
September
10.6m
81%
October
11.3m
84%
November
10.2m
86%
December
9.5m*
81%
* DEC & JAN TRAFFIC BADLY AFFECTED BY OMICRON TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS.
Ryanair Reports Q3 Net Loss Of €96m As Omicron Severely Damages Peak Christmas & New Year Bookings And Fares
31 Jan 2022
Ryanair Holdings today (31 Jan.) reported a Q3 net loss of €96m, compared to a PY Q3 loss of €321m. During this 3-month period:
Q3
31 Dec. 2020
31 Dec. 2021
Change
Customers
8.1m
31.1m
+286%
Load Factor
70%
84%
+14pts
Revenue
€0.34bn
€1.47bn
+331%
Op. Costs
€0.67bn
€1.59bn
+136%
Net Loss
(€321m)
(€96m)
n/m
Ryanair’s CDP[1]climate protection rating improved from “B-” to “B”.
Q3 traffic rebounded strongly by 286% from 8.1m to 31.1m.
Close in bookings and yields in Dec./Jan. badly damaged by Omicron restrictions.
UK CCFF £600m loan was repaid in Oct. (5 months early).
41 B737-8200 “Gamechangers” delivered up to 31 Dec.
720 new routes & 15 new bases were announced for FY22/FY23.
S.22 capacity on sale at 114% of S.19 (pre-Covid).
5-year growth accelerates to 225m guests p.a. by FY26 (prev. 200m p.a.).
Ryanair’s Michael O’Leary, said:
ENVIRONMENT:
“Every passenger who switches to Ryanair from legacy airlines cuts their CO₂ emissions by up to 50% per flight. Over the next 5-years our traffic will grow by 50% to 225m p.a. This growth will be delivered on a fleet of new B737 “Gamechanger” aircraft, which offer 4% more seats, but burn 16% less fuel and reduce noise emissions by 40%.
Our work with the EU, fuel suppliers, and aircraft manufacturers to accelerate sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) supply continues, in partnership with Trinity College Dublin. Ryanair hopes to power 12.5% of our flights using SAF by 2030. Ryanair aims to cut CO₂ per passenger/km by 10% to less than 60 grams by 2030. We are working with A4E and the EU Commission to accelerate reform of the Single European Sky, to minimise ATC inefficiency and delays which will significantly lower fuel consumption, CO₂ emissions and flight delays.
In Q3 Ryanair published our “Aviation with Purpose” sustainability report highlighting ambitious environmental and social targets over the coming years and mapping out Ryanair’s path to net carbon zero by 2050. Our environmental strategy, and progress to date, enabled CDP to upgrade Ryanair’s climate protection rating to B from B- in Dec. 2021. This is a significant advance towards our goal of an independent climate “A” rating within the next 2 years.
SOCIAL:
Our 5-year growth plan will create over 6,000 new well paid jobs for highly trained pilots, cabin crew and engineers all over Europe. Last Oct. Ryanair invested €50m in a cutting-edge Aviation Skills Training Centre in Dublin and we plan to invest over €100m in 2 more, high skills, training centres (one possibly in Spain/Portugal and one in CEE) during this period. To facilitate this growth, Ryanair recently ordered up to 8 CAE full flight simulators (at a value of over $80m). The first of these new sims delivers in FY23.
Following the success of our first Customer Panel meeting in Sept., the Panel will meet again in Madrid in the Spring. We have implemented many of these customer suggestions, including a Day of Travel service in the Ryanair App to assist customers with live updates through every step of their Ryanair journey, a new Ryanair wallet for speedy refunds and an online self-service hub. Our unbending commitment to delivering our customers the lowest fares, the most on-time flights, an industry lowest CO₂ emissions and friendly customer service has seen Ryanair record its highest ever customer satisfaction (“CSAT”) score of 89% in Q3. Our on-time performance in the 3rd quarter, including the busy Christmas/ New Year period, was excellent with almost 90% of all Ryanair flights arriving in “on-time”.
COVID-19 – RECOVERY:
We delivered a strong traffic rebound in Q2 (Sept. quarter) following the successful rollout of the EU Digital Covid Certificates (“DCC”) in July, and the relaxation of EU travel restrictions. Q3 got off to a good start with strong bookings for the Oct. mid-term break, and less confusion (in Oct.) about the UK Govt.’s absurd ‘traffic light’ system. Ryanair’s load active/yield passive recovery strategy saw Oct. traffic rise to 11.3m (84% load factor). Our Nov. load factor improved to 86% (10.2m guests), albeit at lower fares. The sudden emergence of the Omicron variant (late Nov.), and the media hysteria it generated in Dec., forced many European Govts. to reimpose travel restrictions in the run-up to Christmas, which significantly weakened peak (close-in) Christmas & New Year bookings and fares. As a result, Dec. traffic slowed to just 9.5m (with a lower 81% load factor), well behind the expected target of 11m guests. Jan. capacity was cut by 33% on 22 Dec. which lowered the Jan. traffic target from 10m to between 6m-7m customers. We hope that the rollout of booster vaccines across Europe in recent weeks, and growing evidence that Omicron is less virulent than other variants, will enable EU Govts. to remove travel restrictions and restore consumer confidence in inter EU air travel well in advance of Easter and peak S.22.
The Covid-19 crisis accelerated the collapse of many European airlines including Flybe, Norwegian, Germanwings, Level, Stobart and led to material capacity cuts at many others including Alitalia, TAP, LOT, SAS, etc. The tsunami of State Aid from EU Govts. to their insolvent flag carriers (Alitalia, Air France/KLM, Iberia, LOT, Lufthansa, SAS, TAP and others) will distort EU competition and prop up high cost, inefficient, flag carriers for some years. Ryanair was one of very few airlines during the Covid crisis to place significant new aircraft orders, to expand our airport partnerships and to secure lower operating costs so that we can pass on even lower fares on many new routes during the post Covid recovery. Together with our airport partners, we are leading Europe’s traffic recovery and we plan to deliver accelerated traffic growth and jobs over the next 5 years.
GROWTH:
Over the past 9 months our Route Development team continued to work with like-minded airport partners to negotiate lower airport costs, recovery incentives and growth deals. In addition to 15 new bases (Agadir, Billund, Chania, Corfu, Cork, Madeira, Newcastle, Nuremberg, Riga, Stockholm, Venice (Marco-Polo), Venice (Treviso), Turin, Zadar & Zagreb), 720 new routes were announced and low-cost long term growth deals were extended in Stansted (to 2028), Bergamo (2028), Manchester (2028), East Midlands (2028) and Charleroi (2030). Our Group has doubled its capacity in Rome (FCO), Lisbon, Vienna and we will base a record 33 aircraft in Dublin for S.22. Regrettably, our 5 aircraft base at Frankfurt Main will close in Mar. as Frankfurt’s price increases rendered it unable to compete with the many low cost airports across Europe and Germany (Nuremberg) seeking to accelerate traffic recovery and growth.
Up to the end of Q3, Ryanair has taken delivery of 41 B737-8200 “Gamechanger” aircraft and we hope to have over 65 new aircraft in our fleet for peak S.22 when our capacity will be approx. 114% of S.19 (pre-Covid) levels. These Gamechangers widen the cost gap between Ryanair and all other European airlines for the next decade. Their operational reliability, fuel consumption and CO₂ emissions have so far exceeded guidelines, with universally positive passenger and crew feedback. Based on our 210 order book and available fleet capacity, the Ryanair Group plan to accelerate traffic growth over the next 5 years. From a pre-Covid annual traffic of 149m, we now expect to grow by 50% to over 225m guests p.a. by FY26 (previously 33% growth to 200m p.a.).
Q3 FY22 BUSINESS REVIEW:
Revenue & Costs
Q3 scheduled revenues increased 345% to €0.79bn as traffic recovered strongly from 8.1m to 31.1m guests (at an 84% load factor). Despite a strong start to Q3, especially the school’s mid-term break in Oct., the Omicron variant, and return of travel restrictions in early Dec., significantly damaged (higher yielding) close-in Christmas & New Year bookings. Ave. fares in Q3 were just €25 (down 24% on the same quarter pre Covid). Ancillary revenue delivered a solid performance, generating €22 per passenger (+8%), as guests choose priority boarding and reserved seating. Total revenues increased by over 330% to €1.47bn in Q3.
While sectors more than doubled (+220%) and traffic rose 286%, operating costs increased by just 136% to €1.59bn, driven primarily by lower variable costs such as airport & handling, route charges and improved fuel burn as more Gamechangers enter the fleet (offset by the higher cost of jet fuel). Lower costs, coupled with rising load factors, saw unit cost per passenger in Q3 (ex-fuel) reduce to €32, an excellent performance.
Our fuel requirements are almost fully hedged for Q4 FY22 (over 60% jet swaps at $580 per metric tonne, with caps hedging the balance at $750). H1 FY23 is 80% hedged (60% jet swaps at $620 and 20% caps at $715) and H2 FY23 is 70% hedged at $640. Carbon credits are fully hedged for FY22 and 80% hedged for FY23 at €24 and €45 per EUA respectively (well below the current spot price of c.€85). Ryanair’s very strong and sensible hedging policy will deliver significant savings for all our customers and shareholders at a time when many airline competitors have unwisely reduced or abandoned sensible hedging strategies.
Balance Sheet & Liquidity
Ryanair’s balance sheet is one of the strongest in the industry with a BBB (stable) credit rating (S&P and Fitch), almost €3bn cash (at 31 Dec.) and 90% of our B737 fleet unencumbered. In Oct. the Group repaid its UK CCFF £600m loan 5 months early. During the Covid crisis, net debt has risen to over €2bn. We plan to reduce this net debt to zero as quickly as possible over the next 2 years. Strong operating cashflows, offset by €0.8bn capex (mainly Gamechanger deliveries and aircraft deposits), drove a slight reduction in net debt to €2.1bn at 31 Dec. (31 Mar.: €2.3bn). The strength of Ryanair’s balance sheet ensures that the Group is well poised to capitalise rapidly on the many growth opportunities that exist in Europe into the post Covid-19 recovery in 2022 and 2023.
OUTLOOK:
The outlook for pricing and yields for the remainder of FY22 is hugely uncertain. As announced on 22 Dec., our Jan. capacity was cut by 33% (reducing traffic from approx. 10m to between 6m-7m). While recent bookings have improved, following easing of travel restrictions, the booking curve remains very late and close-in, so Q4 traffic requires significant price stimulation at lower prices to quickly recover load factors which suffered steep declines due to the Omicron collapse in bookings over the Christmas/New Year period. Ryanair’s full year traffic forecast remains unchanged at ‘just under’ 100m passengers, but due to Covid uncertainty the FY22 net loss guidance remains within a wider than normal range of €250m to €450m. This outturn is hugely sensitive to any further positive or negative Covid news flow and so we would caution all shareholders to expect further Covid disruptions before we here in Europe and the rest of the world can finally declare that the Covid crisis is behind us.”
[1] CDP – Carbon Disclosure Project is an independent, non-profit, global environmental reporting organisation.
Ryanair December Traffic Rises To 9.5m Guests
05 Jan 2022
Ryanair Holdings plc today (Wed, 5 Jan) released December traffic statistics as follows:
DEC 2020
DEC 2021
TRAFFIC
1.9m
9.5m
L. FACTOR
73%
81%
Ryanair operated over 62,200 flights in December with an 81% load factor.