ADVERTISEMENT

EasyJet Reports First-Ever Loss, Extends U.K. Loan Repayment

EasyJet Extends U.K. Loan as New Lockdowns Prolong Virus Pain

EasyJet Plc reported its first-ever annual loss and extended repayment deadlines for a U.K.-backed loan that’s helped it weather the loss of business caused by the coronavirus.

Britain’s biggest discount carrier posted a loss of 835 million pounds ($1.1 billion) for the year through September. The 25-year-old airline said Tuesday that it will fly no more than 20% of its usual capacity in the final three months of 2020.

EasyJet is bracing for what carriers expect to be a brutal winter, with many markets still closed and a Covid-19 vaccine not yet distributed. The Luton, England-based firm had cash of 2.3 billion pounds as of Sept. 30 and said it will continue to review its liquidity, including further funding opportunities, while seeking to refinance all upcoming maturities.

EasyJet Reports First-Ever Loss, Extends U.K. Loan Repayment

“There’s very little flying going on across Europe,” Chief Executive Officer Johan Lundgren said on Bloomberg Television. “We’re in a good position but we will continue to review all the options that are out there. We don’t know how long restrictions are going to be in place.”

Shares of EasyJet, which reported preliminary results last month, shares fell 2.1% to 761.40 pence as of 12:54 p.m. in London. They’ve declined 47% this year.

Under renegotiated terms with the U.K., EasyJet will stagger repayment of 600 million pounds borrowed under the Bank of England’s Covid Corporate Financing Facility, with half now due in March and the rest in November.

Discussions are also ongoing with governments in “almost all” European countries where EasyJet operates to tap available support, Lundgren said, with the airline having already received help through furlough programs and other measures.

EasyJet Reports First-Ever Loss, Extends U.K. Loan Repayment

The U.K. carrier has also boosted reserves by selling aircraft and disposing of slots at London Stansted airport, which it’s vacating, to rival Ryanair Holdings Plc.

Lundgren said there’s still strong underlying demand for travel, with recent announcements on vaccine developments producing an immediate boost in bookings.

The CEO said EasyJet could help with vaccine distribution programs and that he’s written to U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson offering to participate.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.