Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Ryanair flies back into quarterly profit

Ryanair returns to profit
  • Ryanair said that it returned to profit in the first quarter of 2022.
  • Net profit hit 170 million euros ($174 million) in three months to June.
  • Chief executive Michael O’Leary warns of ongoing threats to the sector’s fragile outlook.

Irish budget airline Ryanair said Monday that it returned to profit in the first quarter as demand jumped on the travel sector’s nascent recovery from the Covid pandemic.

Net profit hit 170 million euros ($174 million) in its first quarter or three months to June, the Dublin-based carrier said in a statement.

That contrasted sharply with a net loss of 273 million euros a year earlier, when it continued to be hit by Covid travel restrictions.

Traffic increased more than five-fold to 45.5 million passengers.

However, Ryanair’s performance still fell short of its pre-pandemic net profit of 243 million euros in the first quarter of its 2019/2020 financial year.

“While traffic recovered strongly… Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February damaged Easter bookings and fares,” said chief executive Michael O’Leary.

He also warned of ongoing threats to the sector’s fragile outlook.

Global aviation is still in recovery mode from the deadly Covid pandemic, which ravaged travel demand, grounded planes and sparked sector-wide losses.

“While we remain hopeful that the high rate of vaccinations in Europe will allow the airline and tourism industry to fully recover and finally put Covid behind us, we cannot ignore the risk of new Covid variants in autumn 2022,” warned O’Leary.

“Our experience with Omicron last November, and the Ukraine invasion in February, shows how fragile the air travel market remains, and the strength of any recovery will be hugely dependent upon there being no adverse or unexpected developments over the remainder” of this year.

Ryanair was “insulated from the spiralling cost of fuel” with 80 percent of its kerosene costs hedged for the 2022/2023 year, it added.

Airlines bet against volatile oil prices by hedging, or taking a defensive position on futures markets.

 

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UK drivers in go-slow protest over surging fuel prices

protest fuel prices
  • Fuel Price Stand Against Tax mobilised drivers to drive deliberately slowly on UK motorways.
  • Senior criminal lawyers stage second walkout in England and Wales in protest of government fee cuts.
  • Britain’s headline inflation rate is at 40-year high, driven in part by the Ukraine crisis.

 

Protesters clogged major UK roads on Monday with a slow-moving procession of vehicles, demanding that the government intervene in the face of skyrocketing fuel prices.

The strike came as senior criminal lawyers staged a second walkout in England and Wales in protest of years of government fee cuts, escalating a “summer of discontent” in Britain.

Rail workers have already staged a series of stoppages to press for better pay as Britain’s headline inflation reaches a 40-year high of just under 10 percent, driven in part by the war in Ukraine.

On the roads, a social media campaign called Fuel Price Stand Against Tax mobilised drivers to drive deliberately slowly on motorways and other arterial routes, demanding the government slash fuel duty.

One of the motorways affected was the M4 including the Prince of Wales Bridge, which links England and Wales.

Welsh police said they had arrested 12 people for driving under 30 miles (48 kilometres) per hour for “a prolonged amount of time”.

Vicky Stamper lost her job as a truck driver last month after the company was forced to cut costs in the face of the surging fuel costs.

“I’m here because I’ve lost my job because of the fuel, and the greedy people at the top taking all of our money,” she told AFP just over the border in England.

Addressing any members of the public inconvenienced by the action, Stamper said “we’re doing this for everyone”.

“If they want to have a whinge, instead of whinging, join us.”

The government insists it has already cut fuel duty once, and is offering other financial support for the public, while blaming Russia for igniting the rapid rise in energy prices.

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Hong Kong arrests 5 for sedition before China rule anniversary

Hong Kong Police

Two men, aged 28 and 30, were arrested and charged, with up to two years in prison. They were accused of using social media to “promote feelings of ill will and enmity between different classes. President Xi Jinping could be complicated by the country’s zero-tolerance policy for coronavirus infection risks.     Hong Kong police … Read more

Dressel and Ledecky give Swimming World Championships golden lustre

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Swimming’s governing body adds an extra edition of its long-course world championships. Covid pandemic caused chaos with swimming’s world championships now held in odd-numbered years. Russia and Ukraine will be there but their form is a mystery. After three years in turbulent waters, swimming starts to regain some stability with an extra edition of its … Read more

Norwegian buys 50 Boeing 737 MAX, ending dispute

Norwegian

Norwegian Air Shuttle announced Monday that it would purchase 50 Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes, putting an end to a dispute between the companies and helping to resurrect the US-made aircraft after two deadly crashes.

The jets will be delivered between 2025 and 2028, or around the time that Norwegian’s aircraft leasing contracts expire, and the contract includes an option for 30 more, according to a statement from the company.

The order is welcome news for the US manufacturer’s flagship Boeing 737 MAX 8, which was grounded for 20 months following two fatal accidents and has been gradually returning to service since late 2020.

Norwegian’s order is part of “the resolution of a dispute we have” with Boeing, the company’s chief executive Geir Karlsen told broadcaster TV2.

The Nordic low-cost carrier and Boeing have been locked in a legal battle for several years, with the Norwegian carrier launching legal proceedings against the US giant for compensation following setbacks related to its 737 MAX and 787 Dreamliner long-range jets.

Without giving further details, Karlsen mentioned “a compensation of two billion kroner ($212 million, 197 million euros) that we used to buy planes under advantageous conditions.”

Read more; Three Norwegian diplomats have been expelled from Russia, according to Norway

According to Karlsen, the price paid is “much lower” than the one Norwegian had to pay a few years ago for its first 737 MAX — which it has since sold — but also than the one offered by European competitor Airbus.

Norwegian said the deal remains subject to “various closing conditions” that it hopes will be concluded by the end of June.

The company, which currently operates 61 aircraft, plans to ramp up operations to have 70 in service this summer and 85 in the summer of 2023.

– ‘Becoming more normal’ –

 

Plagued by over-ambitious expansion, technical problems and the Covid pandemic, the company narrowly avoided bankruptcy last year via an extensive restructuring that led it, among other things, to give up its long-haul flight, reduce its fleet and cancel numerous orders.

Securing the 50 aircraft means Norwegian is also returning to fully owning its own fleet after it was forced to rely on leased aircraft due to its financial woes.

Unless the option to buy more aircraft is implemented, Norwegian’s flight capacity is not expected to increase beyond what has already been announced.

“This is rather a sign of an airline that is becoming more normal, that no longer lives exclusively on leased aircraft but owns part of its fleet itself,” Sydbank analyst Jacob Pedersen commented to business website e24.no.

For Boeing, this order solidifies the revival of the 737 MAX aircraft.

The 737 MAX was temporarily grounded worldwide following two crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia, in 2018 and 2019, that killed a combined 346 people.

Following orders from Caribbean Arajet and American Allegiant Air, British carrier IAG (parent company of British Airways) recently ordered 50 planes with an option for 100 more.

Norwegian also stated on Monday that the Boeing 737 MAX 8 is “approximately 14 percent more fuel-efficient compared to the previous-generation aircraft,” limiting emissions and lowering energy costs in the face of rising fuel prices.

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Covid costs Bundesliga one billion euros over two seasons

bundesliga

BERLIN: The new head of the Bundesliga on Friday revealed a drop in total revenue of more than one billion euros for the two seasons disrupted by the Covid pandemic. According to figures released by the German Football League (DFL), revenue fell from 4.8 billion euros to 4.05 billion euros ($4.5 billion) for the 2020/21 season in … Read more

Nestle posts higher 2021 profit, sales as prices hiked

Nestle

ZURICH: Swiss food giant Nestle’s net profit and sales rose in 2021 as it sold shares in cosmetic company l’Oreal and hiked prices amid soaring global inflation, group results showed Thursday. Businesses have faced supply chain disruptions and decades-high inflation as the global economy recovers from the Covid pandemic and energy prices surge. Nestle, the … Read more

Facebook removes Polish far-right political party account

Facebook

WARSAW, Jan 5, 2022 (AFP) – Facebook on Wednesday suspended the account of the Polish far-right party Konfederacja — the country’s most popular party profile — for breaching standards including on the Covid pandemic. The account for Konfederacja had around 670,000 followers — far higher than Poland’s two main political forces, the ruling Law and Justice … Read more

Spain parliament approves record 2022 budget

Spain

MADRID: Spain’s fragmented parliament gave final approval on Tuesday to the biggest budget in the country’s history, with billions of euros from EU’s huge Covid-19 recovery fund. Passage of the 2022 spending plan boosts the chances that Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s minority government will survive until the end of its mandate in late 2023. Lawmakers … Read more

New Caledonia to hold tense final vote on independence from France

New Caledonia

NOUMEA – The Pacific territory of New Caledonia goes to the polls on Sunday for a third and final referendum on independence from France with campaigning marked by angry demands to call off the vote because of the Covid pandemic. The territory, 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles) east of Australia, was granted three independence referendums under … Read more

Billionaires’ share of global wealth soars during pandemic

global wealth

PARIS: The share of global wealth of the world’s richest people soared at a record pace during the Covid pandemic, a report on inequality showed on Tuesday. Since 1995, the slice held by billionaires has risen from one per cent to three per cent, according to the World Inequality Report. “This increase was exacerbated during the … Read more

Needle-free vaccine patches coming soon, say researchers and makers

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WASHINGTON: Effective vaccines, without a needle: Since the start of the Covid pandemic, researchers have doubled down on efforts to create patches that deliver life-saving drugs painlessly to the skin, a development that could revolutionize medicine. The technique could help save children’s tears at doctors’ offices, and help people who have a phobia of syringes. … Read more

Over 2.01 billion doses administered as China Covid-19 outbreak well controlled

BEIJING: Over 2.01 billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines had been administered in China as of Friday, data from the National Health Commission showed Saturday. Day earlier, a health official said the latest Covid-19 outbreak in China has been controlled. The number of locally-transmitted cases has been declining for 11 consecutive days across the country, Mi … Read more

In September, Broadway to light up again when shows set to return

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