Wizz Air sees earnings drop after ยฃ43 million hit from Iran war


Wizz Air has revealed its annual profits slumped after taking a 50 million euro (ยฃ43.1 million) hit from the Iran war but hailed โ€œresilienceโ€ after flying a record number of passengers.

The low-cost airline said it could not provide an outlook for the year ahead partly because of the volatility stemming from the conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

It reported an operating profit of 139.7 million euros (ยฃ120.6 million) for the year to the end of March, down 16.6% on the year before.

The companyโ€™s net profit was almost entirely wiped out, from 213.9 million euros (ยฃ184.6 million) to 1.3 million euros (ยฃ1.1 million) year on year.

Wizz Air said it faced a number of one-off costs during the year including maintenance and repairs from the phase-out of an older fleet and delivery of new aircraft, and crew costs jumping by 16%.

Like other airlines, it also had to cancel flights after the onset of the US-Israeliโ€™s war with Iran at the end of February.

Cancelling flights to Tel Aviv in Israel and other routes to the Middle East and Cyprus in March impacted its earnings by an estimated 50 million euros (ยฃ43.1 million), according to the firm.

Flights to Tel Aviv resumed at the end of May, and Wizz Air said it took steps to improve its summer season offers to alternative destinations like Spain, Italy, Croatia and Albania.

Despite the cost pressures, Wizz Air said it flew a recordย 69.7 million passengers in the year to the end of March, a 10th more than the year before.

Revenues from airfares increased by 8.4% year on year to 3.16 billion euros (ยฃ2.73 billion).

The companyโ€™s load factor, a key industry measure of how well it fills its planes, dipped by 0.5 percentage points to 90.7%, which it was largely a result of the aftermath of the Iran war.

Jozsef Varadi, Wizz Airโ€™s chief executive, said: โ€œWe have continued to grow and serve an increasing number of customers.

โ€œEqually, the defining feature of the year was the set of strategic decisions we made to position the business for long-term resilience and competitiveness.

โ€œThis has proven to be the right direction, working well in a balanced environment as well as at times of volatility, which the industry experienced towards the end of the financial year due to the Middle East crisis.โ€

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