O’Leary expects Ryanair to lure passengers from more expensive rivals
Ryanair CE Michael O’Leary expects the low-cost airline to lure passengers from more expensive rivals this winter as passengers tighten their belts because of the economic slowdown. With households under pressure from soaring energy bills and inflation, the industry is preparing for a grim winter after summer disruption because of staff shortages as airlines struggled to cope with an uptick in demand. O’Leary said the cost of living crisis would inevitably “dampen” demand for flying, and that passenger numbers across Europe would not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2025. “You would be crazy not to worry about the looming recession,” he said on Tuesday. “Overall for the market there is no doubt a recession will significantly . . . dampen the traffic recovery post-Covid,” he said. But he said Ryanair would continue to grow “full steam ahead” regardless of the economic climate and UK inflation forecasts of nearly 20%. He expects Ryanair to benefit as customers have typically turned to lower-cost airlines during previous recessions. “Some people may travel less . . . but what we see is far more people trading down to the lowest fare operator . . . and that I think will happen again.” He said early bookings for this winter were ahead of 2019 levels, but suggested this was because passengers were switching to Ryanair as other airlines scaled back their plans. “While our recovery and growth is still very strong, it is still very fragile and prone to falling over,” he said. The low-cost airline flew 15% more flights this summer than in 2019, benefiting from airlines such as Norwegian and Alitalia downsizing during the pandemic, and established rivals including British Airways cutting their flight numbers because of staffing shortages. Ryanair expects to carry 166m passengers in its current financial year to the end of March, up from 149.5m in the full year before Covid-19.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2022-08-31/unaligned/o2019leary-expects-ryanair-to-lure-passengers-from-more-expensive-rivals
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O’Leary expects Ryanair to lure passengers from more expensive rivals
Ryanair CE Michael O’Leary expects the low-cost airline to lure passengers from more expensive rivals this winter as passengers tighten their belts because of the economic slowdown. With households under pressure from soaring energy bills and inflation, the industry is preparing for a grim winter after summer disruption because of staff shortages as airlines struggled to cope with an uptick in demand. O’Leary said the cost of living crisis would inevitably “dampen” demand for flying, and that passenger numbers across Europe would not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2025. “You would be crazy not to worry about the looming recession,” he said on Tuesday. “Overall for the market there is no doubt a recession will significantly . . . dampen the traffic recovery post-Covid,” he said. But he said Ryanair would continue to grow “full steam ahead” regardless of the economic climate and UK inflation forecasts of nearly 20%. He expects Ryanair to benefit as customers have typically turned to lower-cost airlines during previous recessions. “Some people may travel less . . . but what we see is far more people trading down to the lowest fare operator . . . and that I think will happen again.” He said early bookings for this winter were ahead of 2019 levels, but suggested this was because passengers were switching to Ryanair as other airlines scaled back their plans. “While our recovery and growth is still very strong, it is still very fragile and prone to falling over,” he said. The low-cost airline flew 15% more flights this summer than in 2019, benefiting from airlines such as Norwegian and Alitalia downsizing during the pandemic, and established rivals including British Airways cutting their flight numbers because of staffing shortages. Ryanair expects to carry 166m passengers in its current financial year to the end of March, up from 149.5m in the full year before Covid-19.<br/>