Wizz Air warns of more losses in 'transition year'

Reuters

Published Jun 02, 2021 07:04

Updated Jun 02, 2021 12:01

By Laurence Frost

PARIS (Reuters) -European budget airline Wizz Air warned of further losses in its current financial year, amid a slower-than-expected recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The ultra-low cost carrier faces another "transition year" as travel curbs linger on, Chief Executive Jozsef Varadi said on Wednesday, as the company posted a 576 million euro ($703 million) net loss for the 12 months ended March 31.

"Unless we see an accelerated and permanent lifting of restrictions we expect a reported net loss in full-year 2022," Varadi said.

Despite the uncertainty, Wizz and low-cost peers such as Ryanair have used the crisis to add new routes as traditional airline rivals retrench. The Hungarian carrier now has 43 aircraft bases operating or announced, compared with 25 before the pandemic.

Wizz has also leveraged a strong cash position to continue acquiring new, more efficient jets that will sharpen its competitive edge in an eventual rebound. Its fleet increased by 16 aircraft to 137 at year end.

The airline said it expects to fly around 30% of its pre-crisis capacity in its current first quarter, returning to full schedules only in its 2022-23 financial year.

While holding out hope for progress on an EU digital travel pass, Varadi described as a "missed opportunity" the patchwork of travel rules still in place.

"I would have expected the European Union to step up and coordinate," he told Reuters. "Europe has become pretty much a zoo - every country is different."

The airline's London-listed shares were trading 1.8% lower at 4.79 pounds as of 1032 GMT.

"Commentary from the company suggests the market will need to adjust its expectations down, with this likely to overshadow sentiment in the short term," Goodbody analyst Mark Simpson said.

The underlying full-year loss excluding fuel hedging deficits amounted to 482 million euros, Wizz said, on a 73% revenue decline to 739 million euros.