In This Article:
By Joanna Plucinska, Rachel More and Ilona Wissenbach
LONDON/BERLIN/FRANKFURT (Reuters) -German airline group Lufthansa reported a fall in third-quarter operating profit on Tuesday as its flagship brand struggles with low yields, competition with international airlines and spiralling costs.
Third-quarter operating profit of 1.3 billion euros ($1.41 billion) was largely in line with the expectations of analysts polled by the company, but 9% lower than a year earlier.
"Delayed aircraft deliveries, punctuality issues at our hubs in Germany and regulatory disadvantages are impacting our core brand," CEO Carsten Spohr said in a statement.
The third quarter, which includes the busy summer months for travellers, is usually the strongest for European airlines, but rising costs, unpredictability tied to the crisis in the Middle East and plane delivery delays continue to weigh on results.
Shares in Lufthansa were down 2.68% at 1152 GMT after the results were announced. Shares in Wizz Air, British Airways owner IAG and easyJet also dropped.
Lufthansa's passenger airlines, which include its namesake brand as well as carriers such as Austrian Airlines, Swiss International and Eurowings, generated an operating profit of 1.2 billion euros in the third quarter, down from 1.4 billion euros a year earlier.
The drop was driven mainly by a 234 million-euro decline in the result of its core brand Lufthansa Airlines, the company said in a statement. A slower recovery in corporate travel also contributed, analysts said.
"They probably face the toughest industrial backdrop out of any European airline - they were the most dependent on corporate revenue pre-pandemic," Bernstein analyst Alex Irving told Reuters.
Spohr told journalists in a media briefing that he doesn't believe business travel globally and especially in Germany will return to 2019 levels.
The airline has also repeatedly complained about its struggle to compete with Chinese carriers still able to fly over Russian airspace, prompting Lufthansa to suspend its Frankfurt to Beijing route.
Yields, a proxy for airfares, fell 14% in the Asia-Pacific region in the third quarter, the company reported.
"The fact that Lufthansa now must remove one of its oldest routes, Frankfurt-Beijing, from its flight schedule shows how much the balance of international competition is shifting," a Lufthansa spokesperson told Reuters in an email.
"European airlines are in an extremely unequal competitive position with China, as well as with airlines from the Persian Gulf and Bosphorus."