Easyjet's profits have tumbled during what the airline described as a year of "significant challenges".
Pre-tax profits
in the year to 30 September fell 27.9% to £495m, but it was in line
with a warning given last month. Passenger numbers rose 6.6%.
Sterling's weakness, the impact on air travel of terror attacks, and air traffic control strikes hit trade.
Easyjet also confirmed that it had set up a continental-based airline ahead of the UK's exit from the EU.
'Resilient performance'
Although passenger numbers rose 6.6% to 73.1 million, revenues fell 0.4% to £4.67bn as the airline cut fares.
Easyjet's
chief executive, Carolyn McCall, told the BBC that the rise in
passengers and an increase in the load factor - the airline's ability to
fill seats - showed that there was no lack of demand.
But the
carrier had suffered a series of "external shocks", she said. These
included the impact on air travel of terror attacks across Europe, Egypt
and Tunisia, air traffic control strikes in France and political
turmoil in Turkey.
The airline has also been hit by sterling's
sharp depreciation since the Brexit referendum. In the face of these
issues, "EasyJet achieved a resilient performance," she said.
Ms McCall also confirmed that Easyjet had set up a separate airline
based on the European mainland, in readiness for when the UK leaves the
EU.
Current EU flying rights might have to be renegotiated and the new company would ensure Easyjet could operate within the EU.
She
said: "We are not saying there will be no agreement. We just don't know
the shape or form. We don't have the luxury of waiting. But we have to
take control of our own future."
There was no question of job cuts
or moving from the current headquarters at Luton, she said. It was
about registering aircraft and "securing flying rights".
EasyJet has bases across 11 UK airports and flies more than 830
routes on its network across Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.
The
airline also said it was planning a group-wide review over the next
year to make it a "simpler, more efficient" company and to deliver
"meaningful" savings.
Easyjet shares, down 42% over the past year, rose 1.7% in early trading on Tuesday.
Richard
Hunter, head of research at Wilson King Investment Management, said the
results showed the airline "is clearly running hard to stand still".
"But the market's reaction to the numbers in early trade shows some grounds for optimism," he added.
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