British low-cost airline EasyJet slashed its first-half losses as a collapse of rivals boosted passenger numbers, but the performance was weighed down by integration costs from Air Berlin assets. Losses after tax shrank to £54 million ($73 million, 61 million euros) in the first half of the group's financial year or six months to March, EasyJet said in a trading update.
That compared with a deeper loss of £192 million in the same period of the previous year. Sales surged by a fifth to £2.2 billion as it reaped the benefits from the collapse of European rivals including Alitalia and Monarch, and a flight cancellations crisis at Ireland's Ryanair.
Passenger numbers leapt three million to 36.8 million, helped by extra customers from the purchase of Berlin's Tegel Airport from bankrupt German carrier Air Berlin. Stripping out Tegel integration costs, EasyJet added that pre-tax profit hit £8.0 million in the first half. That contrasted sharply with a loss of £212 million last time around.
"EasyJet has delivered an excellent performance reporting a profit of £8.0 million, one of our best results ever in the winter trading period," said newly-installed chief executive Johan Lundgren.
"Our performance was helped by the reductions in capacity from other airlines but was also driven by the strength of the easyJet brand," added Lundgren, who took the reins last December from Carolyn McCall. Lundgren, the former deputy of TUI travel group, added that EasyJet will plough more investment into its holidays business.