Ryanair CEO O’Leary sees ‘dramatic’ jump in ticket sales
Ryanair has seen a “dramatic recovery” in bookings over the past two weeks as the easing of pandemic travel curbs across Europe encourages people to fly again. The Irish low-cost carrier’s planes are flying about 75% full and could reach 90% of capacity by the peak of the summer high season, CEO Michael O’Leary said at a briefing in Milan Wednesday. Ryanair expects fares to remain “very low” through May before rising for summer, by which point it’s possible that a combination of strong demand and limited capacity could see them climb above pre-coronavirus levels, O’Leary said. Trends for next winter are difficult to predict, he said. Shares of Ryanair spiked, and were up 3.4% as of 3:38 p.m. in Dublin. The comments mark a change of tone from Europe’s biggest discount airline. Late last month, when Ryanair reported quarterly results, O’Leary took a cautious view on the pace of the tourism rebound. At the time, Ryanair said it would cut prices to stimulate demand this quarter while more countries considered removing travel restrictions. Since then, nations including France and Spain have moved to ease rules for vaccinated people and the number of infections has fallen throughout the region. European airlines are counting on a bumper summer season driven by pent-up demand after a two-year downturn in travel caused by the Covid outbreak.<br/>
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Ryanair CEO O’Leary sees ‘dramatic’ jump in ticket sales
Ryanair has seen a “dramatic recovery” in bookings over the past two weeks as the easing of pandemic travel curbs across Europe encourages people to fly again. The Irish low-cost carrier’s planes are flying about 75% full and could reach 90% of capacity by the peak of the summer high season, CEO Michael O’Leary said at a briefing in Milan Wednesday. Ryanair expects fares to remain “very low” through May before rising for summer, by which point it’s possible that a combination of strong demand and limited capacity could see them climb above pre-coronavirus levels, O’Leary said. Trends for next winter are difficult to predict, he said. Shares of Ryanair spiked, and were up 3.4% as of 3:38 p.m. in Dublin. The comments mark a change of tone from Europe’s biggest discount airline. Late last month, when Ryanair reported quarterly results, O’Leary took a cautious view on the pace of the tourism rebound. At the time, Ryanair said it would cut prices to stimulate demand this quarter while more countries considered removing travel restrictions. Since then, nations including France and Spain have moved to ease rules for vaccinated people and the number of infections has fallen throughout the region. European airlines are counting on a bumper summer season driven by pent-up demand after a two-year downturn in travel caused by the Covid outbreak.<br/>