Ticket fare prices this summer are likely going to be lower than previously expected, Ryanair chief executive Michael O’Leary said on Tuesday, despite previous warnings that rising costs would get passed on to airline customers.
Aviation executives and analysts have said ticket prices were set to go up even more this year as capacity constraints and slower aircraft deliveries limit the amount of planes in the sky despite robust travel demand.
However, O’Leary said that prices were not rising as fast as previously assumed. Ryanair shares were down 6.4 per cent at 1354 GMT, with EasyJet and Lufthansa shares also down after O’Leary’s comments.
“Looking at summer ... We thought pricing would be up 5-10 per cent. We’re heading to flat (pricing year-on-year) to 5 per cent up, which is surprising with a lot of the Airbus fleet grounded for maintenance,” he told Reporters in Brussels.
I’m in my 70s and have €500,000 in savings. If I need to go into a nursing home, what happens if I run out of money?
Microsoft emphasises commitment to Ireland, which can ‘count on us’
Cost of our climate inaction laid bare in new report
Ireland faces EU bill of up to €26bn if it misses climate targets
In February, O’Leary said average fares could increase by 10-15 euros in the next five years. – Reuters