22 January
2025
easyJet plc
('easyJet')
easyJet Trading Update for
the quarter ended 31 December 2024
easyJet improves Q1 performance by 52%
YoY
·
Q1 headline loss before tax
£61 million, an improvement of £65 million
YoY
o Passenger
growth +7% YoY
o ASK Capacity
+11% YoY, with a sector length increase of 6% YoY
o RASK flat YoY,
in line with guidance
o CASK ex fuel
flat YoY, Fuel CASK reduced by 13% YoY driving total CASK down 4%
YoY
o easyJet
holidays delivered £43 million profit, +£12 million YoY
·
H1 underlying winter losses
expected to reduce when adjusted for the timing of Easter and a
prior year release of aged balances
o H1 ASK Capacity
+12% YoY (Q2 ASKs +14% YoY)
o Headline result
impacted by Easter timing and a one off prior year
release of aged balances. Q2 underlying unit revenue
trends are modestly lower than Q1 due to our capacity
investment on longer leisure flows. These are driving productivity
and utilisation benefits this winter with route maturity benefits
expected next winter and beyond
o Expect H1
headline CASK ex fuel to slightly reduce YoY
o Expect H1'25
fuel CASK to reduce by c.8% YoY, when factoring in current fuel
spot price
·
Positive outlook for FY25,
consistent with consensus1, and on track to achieve
medium term target of >£1bn PBT
o Expect FY25 ASK
growth of c. 8% YoY
o easyJet
holidays expects c.25% customer growth YoY
o Forward
bookings; Q2 57% sold, +2ppts YoY; Q3 26% sold, +2ppts YoY; Q4 13%
sold, +1ppt YoY
Overview
easyJet's first quarter result
significantly improved as demand for our primary airport network
and package holidays continued, alongside cost control and
favourable fuel prices. Six new A320neo family aircraft were
delivered and taken into ownership in the quarter, a seventh
aircraft was delivered in January and another two are expected to
be operational by peak summer.
This winter's underlying result will reflect Q1
improvements, partially offset by Q2 underlying unit
revenue trends being modestly lower than Q1, as
capacity investments (Q2 ASKs +14% YoY) are naturally requiring
stimulation while driving productivity and utilisation benefits
this winter with route maturity benefits expected next winter and
beyond.
The traditionally busy Easter period
is seeing strong demand and bookings continue to build for Summer
2025. At this early stage of the year, the current
booking trends are supportive of FY25
consensus1. We
remain focused and confident in the progress
towards our medium term target of sustainably generating over £1
billion of profit before tax.
Kenton Jarvis,
CEO of easyJet, commenting on the results said:
"easyJet performed well in the quarter reducing Q1 losses by
52% year on year while flying 7% more customers to an even greater
choice of destinations across the network. easyJet holidays
continued its growth, achieving around a 40% increase in profits
during the period.
"Looking to this summer, we have seen continuing demand for
easyJet's flights and holidays where we have one million more
customers already booked, with firm
favourites like Palma, Faro and Alicante as well as new
destinations like Tunisia and Cairo proving popular.
All of this
demonstrates positive progress towards our medium term target to
deliver more than one billion pounds of profit before
tax."
Sustainability
We are the best ESG rated European
airline from Sustainalytics (score of 21.4). We hold a best in
class rating from CDP (A-) and MSCI (AA rating), and we also retain
our position in FTSE4Good for a second year running. The
efficiencies which we have ahead of us will only strengthen our
position.
In the first quarter of FY25 easyJet
signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) and a Letter of Intent
with Enlive and Moeve for the supply of sustainable aviation fuel
(SAF) covering material requirements in Italy and Spain over the
next 5 years, as we continue to drive progress on our net zero
roadmap. In addition, we have signed a tri-party MoU with Renavia
and World Fuel Services giving easyJet access to material volumes
of advanced Bio and eSAF from 2030.
Outlook
·
At this early stage of the
year, current booking trends are supportive of FY25
consensus1.
·
H1 underlying winter losses
expected to reduce when adjusted for the timing of Easter and a
prior year release of aged balances.
-
Easter moving into Q3'25 (c.£30m) and the prior year release
of aged balances (c.£34m). These combined are worth c.4ppts of RASK
reduction YoY in Q2.
·
Forward
bookings; Q2 57% sold, +2ppts YoY; Q3 26% sold,
+2ppts YoY; Q4 13% sold, +1ppt YoY
·
H1'25 total CASK to reduce
YoY
·
easyJet holidays expects
c.25% customer growth YoY
-
Bookings; H1'25 is 93% sold & H2'25 is 45%
sold
·
Expect ASK capacity growth
of c.8% in FY25
- FY25 Seat
capacity growth expected to be c.3% YoY to c.103 million seats (H1
c.45 million, H2 c.58 million)
YoY
growth
|
ASK's
|
Sector length
|
Seats
|
H1'25
|
+12%
|
+6%
|
+6%
|
H2'25
|
+5%
|
+5%
|
+1%
|
FY25
|
+8%
|
+5%
|
+3%
|
Fuel & FX Hedging
Jet Fuel
|
H1'25
|
H2'25
|
H1'26
|
|
USD
|
H1'25
|
H2'25
|
H1'26
|
Hedged position
|
82%
|
64%
|
32%
|
|
Hedged position
|
76%
|
61%
|
34%
|
Average hedged rate
($/MT)
|
807
|
770
|
755
|
|
Average hedged rate (USD/GBP)
|
1.26
|
1.27
|
1.28
|
Current spot ($/MT) at
20.01.25
|
c.795
|
|
Current spot (USD/GBP) at 20.01.25
|
c.1.22
|
Capacity
During Q1 easyJet flew
24.1 million seats. In the same period last year easyJet flew 23.0
million seats. Load factor was 88% (Q1 FY24: 86%).
Passenger numbers in the
quarter increased to 21.2 million (Q1 FY24: 19.8 million).
|
October 2024
|
November 2024
|
December 2024
|
Q1
FY25
|
Q1
FY24
|
Number of flights
|
54,024
|
35,723
|
43,349
|
133,096
|
128,272
|
Peak operating aircraft
|
324
|
322
|
293
|
324
|
317
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Passengers (thousand)
|
8,554
|
5,796
|
6,886
|
21,236
|
19,842
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Seats flown (thousand)
|
9,704
|
6,491
|
7,877
|
24,072
|
22,994
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Load factor
|
88.1%
|
89.3%
|
87.4%
|
88.2%
|
86.3%
|
Financial Summary
|
Q1'25
|
Q1'24
|
Variance
favourable/ (adverse)
|
Passenger revenue (£'m)
|
1,255
|
1,133
|
11%
|
Airline ancillary revenue
(£'m)
|
535
|
486
|
10%
|
Holidays revenue2
(£'m)
|
247
|
181
|
36%
|
Group revenue (£'m)
|
2,037
|
1,800
|
13%
|
Fuel costs (£'m)
|
(500)
|
(516)
|
3%
|
Airline headline EBITDA costs ex
fuel (£'m)
|
(1,182)
|
(1,057)
|
(12)%
|
Holidays EBITDA costs2
(£'m)
|
(207)
|
(153)
|
(35)%
|
Group headline EBITDA costs (£'m)
|
(1,889)
|
(1,726)
|
(9)%
|
Group headline EBITDA (£'m)
|
148
|
74
|
100%
|
Airline depreciation &
amortisation (£'m)
|
(185)
|
(189)
|
2%
|
Holidays depreciation &
amortisation2 (£'m)
|
(3)
|
(2)
|
(50)%
|
Group headline LBIT (£'m)
|
(40)
|
(117)
|
66%
|
Airline financing costs excluding
balance sheet revaluations (£'m)
|
(19)
|
(10)
|
(90)%
|
Holidays financing costs
(£'m)
|
6
|
5
|
20%
|
Balance sheet revaluations
(£'m)
|
(8)
|
(4)
|
(100)%
|
Group headline LBT (£'m)
|
(61)
|
(126)
|
52%
|
|
|
|
|
Airline passenger RASK
(p)
|
4.16
|
4.16
|
0%
|
Airline ancillary RASK
(p)
|
1.77
|
1.79
|
(1)%
|
Total airline RASK (p)
|
5.93
|
5.95
|
0%
|
Total airline revenue per seat (£)
|
74.36
|
70.39
|
6%
|
|
|
|
|
Airline headline CASK ex fuel
(p)
|
(4.61)
|
(4.63)
|
0%
|
Airline Fuel CASK (p)
|
(1.66)
|
(1.90)
|
13%
|
Airline total headline CASK (p)
|
(6.27)
|
(6.53)
|
4%
|
Airline total headline cost per seat (£)
|
(78.70)
|
(77.22)
|
(2)%
|
|
|
|
|
Sector length (km)
|
1,255
|
1,182
|
6%
|
Available seat kilometres (ASK)
(millions)
|
30,213
|
27,190
|
11%
|
Cash and other cash investments
(£'bn)
|
2.8
|
1.9
|
47%
|
Net cash/ (debt) (£'m) *
|
(484)
|
(485)
|
0%
|
* Net debt is flat year on year due to the
final delivery payments for the 22 aircraft delivered in the last
12 months (six in the current quarter) and pre-delivery payments
for the future ramp up in aircraft deliveries.
1) Internally compiled consensus for FY25
Headline PBT is £709 million as at 22 January 2025.
2) easyJet holidays numbers include elimination
of intercompany airline transactions
For further
details please contact easyJet plc:
Institutional investors and
analysts:
Adrian Talbot
Investor
Relations
+44 (0) 7971 592 373
Media:
Anna
Knowles
Corporate Communications
+44 (0) 7985 873 313
Olivia
Peters
Teneo
+44
(0) 20 7353 4200
Harry
Cameron
Teneo
+44 (0) 20 7353 4200
Glossary
· Available seat kilometres (ASK) - Seats flown multiplied by the
number of kilometres flown.
· Airline cost per ASK (CASK) - Total Airline costs divided by
available seat kilometres.
· Airline cost per seat (CPS) - Total Airline costs divided by
seats flown.
· Airline cost per seat, excluding fuel (CPS ex fuel)- Total
Airline costs adding back fuel costs, divided by seats
flown.
· Load factor - Number of passengers as a percentage of number of
seats flown. The load factor is not weighted for the effect of
varying sector lengths.
· Headline - measures of underlying performance which is not
impacted by non-headline items.
· Net cash - Total cash less borrowings and lease liabilities;
cash includes money market deposits and other cash investments but
excludes restricted cash.
· Non-headline items - Non-headline items are those where, in
management's opinion, their separate reporting provides an
additional understanding to users of the financial statements of
easyJet's underlying trading performance, and which are significant
by virtue of their size/nature.
· Passengers - Number of earned seats flown. Earned seats
comprises seats sold to passengers (including no-shows), seats
provided for promotional purposes and seats provided to staff for
business travel.
· Revenue - The sum of passenger revenue and ancillary revenue,
including package holiday revenue.
· Revenue per ASK (RASK) - Airline revenue divided by available
seat kilometres.
· Revenue per seat (RPS) - Airline revenue divided by seats
flown.
· Seats flown - Seats available for passengers.
· Sector - A one-way revenue flight.
This announcement may contain
statements which constitute 'forward-looking statements'. Although
easyJet believes that the expectations reflected in these
forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurance
that these expectations will prove to have been correct. Because
these statements involve risks and uncertainties, actual results
may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these
forward-looking statements.