British Airways parent company predicts big profits in 2023

BA operated only 70% of its 2019 schedule last year due to resource shortages

Simon Calder
Travel Correspondent
Friday 24 February 2023 18:36 EST
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Going places? Passengers at BA’s main base, Heathrow Terminal 5, where thousands of flights were cancelled during 20222
Going places? Passengers at BA’s main base, Heathrow Terminal 5, where thousands of flights were cancelled during 20222 (Simon Calder)

IAG, the company that owns British Airways, Aer Lingus, and Iberia and Vueling of Spain, says it saw a “strong recovery” during 2022.

BA’s parent company turned a 2021 operating loss of €2.8bn (£2.5bn) into an operating profit of €1.3bn (£1.1bn) last year.

The conglomerate predicts profits for 2023 in the range of €1.8bn-€2.3bn (£1.6bn-£2bn) – though it warns: “This assumes no further setbacks related to Covid-19 or material impacts from geopolitical developments.”

Luis Gallego, the chief executive, said: “2022 was a year of strong recovery, driven by sustained leisure demand and markets reopening.

“At this point of the year we continue to see robust forward-bookings, while also remaining conscious of global macro-economic uncertainties.”

The cost of fuel has increased 30 per cent since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The financial statement for IAG’s full-year results says: “The premium leisure segment performed very well.”

IAG “quickly recovered operations in our main hubs in Madrid, Dublin and Barcelona” – but at London Heathrow, the base for British Airways, tens of thousands of flights were cancelled during the summer of 2022 due to resource shortages.

BA operated only 70 per cent of its 2019 schedule last year, compared with 87 per cent on Aer Lingus and Iberia, and 98 per cent on Vueling.

IAG’s net debt is €10.4bn (£9.2bn).

On Thursday night IAG announced it had bought the 80 per cent of Air Europa that it did not previously own. The airline, like Iberia, is based in Madrid. The price paid was €400m (£352m). The aim is to transform the Spanish capital “to compete with Europe’s largest hubs”: Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Istanbul, London Heathrow and Paris CDG.

Mr Gallego said: “This acquisition will enable us to grow Madrid as a hub, offering a gateway to Latin America and beyond, with benefits for customers, employees and shareholders.”

But the European Commission is likely to take 18 months to approve the deal, which may involve “remedy” slots being handed back at Madrid airport to counter the reduction in competition.

Rob Burgess, editor of Head for Points, said: “It gives IAG virtual dominance of domestic flights in Spain with the top three Spanish airlines by passenger numbers – Vueling, Iberia and Air Europa – now under its control.”

Assuming the takeover goes ahead, the Air Europa brand will remain – though the operation will be managed by Iberia.

Air Europa has 50 aircraft and carried 10 million passengers last year on Spanish domestic, European and transatlantic routes.

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