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EasyJet Says Profit at Top End of Forecasts 

EasyJet Says Profit at Top End of Forecasts 

(Bloomberg) -- EasyJet Plc said earnings for the year through September were toward the top end of its forecasts, helped by strikes at British Airways and Ryanair Holdings Plc.

The unrest at EasyJet’s biggest rivals spurred demand and sent revenue per seat, a proxy for fares, up 0.8% in the second half despite earlier predictions of a slide, the Luton, England-based carrier said in a statement Tuesday.

The figures weren’t enough to quell investor concerns that EasyJet had relied too much on disruption elsewhere, and that it faces tough times in an operating environment that has seen a spate of travel-company collapses this year. The shares fell the most since May.

Chief Executive Officer Johan Lundgren said forward bookings for 2020 are in line a year ago and that capacity growth will be at the lower end of the historic range, something that should further bolster fares. Efforts to curb delays and cancellations in poor weather or technical glitches are also bearing fruit.

Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Daniel Roeska said in a note that the full-year numbers were in line with his estimates but that it’s not clear how well EasyJet would have performed without a helping hand from the BA and Ryanair strikes and the collapse last month of Thomas Cook Group Plc.

The stock fell as much as 5.8% and was trading 4.7% lower at 1,117 pence as of 8:23 a.m. in London. The shares are barely changed for the year, valuing EasyJet at 4.44 billion pounds ($5.5 billion).

EasyJet and its peers should continue to gain from the exit of weaker operators, Damian Brewer, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said in a note to clients. Demand is poised to exceed capacity this winter, he said, spurring an increase in fares after a period of sustained oversupply.

EasyJet said 12-month pretax profit was between 420 million pounds and 430 million pounds, after earlier predicting 400 million pounds to 440 million pounds. The carrier reported a profit of 578 million pounds in fiscal 2019.

As least four carriers have failed in the past month alone amid fluctuating fuel prices, a glut of seats and a slowing European economy. Slovenian flag carrier Adria Airways and XL Airways and Aigle Azur, both of France, folded alongside Thomas Cook, whose collapse led to the biggest peacetime airlift in British history as stranded passengers were brought home.

To contact the reporter on this story: Siddharth Philip in London at sphilip3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tara Patel at tpatel2@bloomberg.net, Christopher Jasper

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