Easyjet has warned that the weakened pound will cost it £90m in its current financial year.
That is more than double its original estimate made in July, when it warned of a £40m hit.
Jet fuel is priced in dollars, so the falling pound has made it more expensive for Easyjet to run its aircraft.
Easyjet expects a profit of between $490m and £495m for its financial year, which ends on 30 September.
That would be down 28% on the £686m annual profit it made in 2015. It would also be the first fall in annual profits since 2009.
Shares were down 5% in early trading.
"The
current environment is tough for all airlines, but history shows that
at times like this, the strongest airlines become stronger," said
Carolyn McCall, Easyjet chief executive.
The problem for Easyjet
is that although it has been flying passengers in record numbers, those
passengers have been enjoying lower ticket prices.
Easyjet expects revenue per seat to be down 8.7% for the year and expects ticket prices to fall further in the coming months.
'Aggressive' discounts
"Average
fares are coming down, which is good for customers. To a certain
extent, there is a price war going on," said Robin Byde, airline analyst
at Cantor.
"Passenger growth is very strong, cabins are very full. To do that, they've had to discount quite aggressively," he said.
Terror attacks in Europe, Turkey and Tunisia have also affected sales.
"We have been disproportionately affected by extraordinary events," said Ms McCall.
Easyjet says "extraordinary" events have cost it £125m up to the end of its third quarter (which ended on 30 June).
- Disruption following explosion of Russian jet flying from Sharm El Sheikh £30m
- Disruption following Paris terror attacks £50m
- Brussels terror attack, EgyptAir crash, costs of redeploying fleet £25m
- Disruption caused by strikes, weather and runway closures £20m
The airline says that it is particularly vulnerable to strikes
in France, as almost two-thirds of its flights touch French airspace.
Business
is likely to be tough for Easyjet over the coming months. Recent terror
attacks might discourage some people from travelling and Easyjet says
the pound's weakness will make foreign travel less affordable for UK
tourists.
"Easytet is facing challenging times on a number of
fronts, and it's one of the worst performing stocks in the FTSE 100
since the EU referendum," said George Salmon, an analyst at Hargreaves
Lansdown.
"The competition is hotting up too. Other airlines are
looking covetously at easyJet's market share, with pressure coming from
both the budget players Wizz and Ryanair, and 'premium economy'
offerings like Vueling," he said.
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