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BA owner IAG's profits hit by weak pound | BA owner IAG's profits hit by weak pound |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Airline group IAG, which owns British Airways and Iberia, has reported a rise in profits despite being affected by last year's fall in the pound. | |
Pre-tax profits at the company rose by nearly a third last year to 2.4bn euros (£2bn), with operating profits up 8.6% to 2.5bn euros. | |
IAG said the fall in the value of the pound last year cost it 460m euros. | |
Willie Walsh, IAG's chief executive, said: "It was a good performance in a challenging environment." | |
He added that IAG had continued to make good progress. | |
"In 2016, we carried more than 100 million passengers - double the number British Airways and Iberia carried in 2010, a year before IAG was created," he said. | |
The rise in profits came despite revenues dipping 1.3% to 22.5bn euros, while revenue per passenger fell 5.4%. | |
The airline group said it intended to carry out a share buyback of 500m euros during the course of 2017. | The airline group said it intended to carry out a share buyback of 500m euros during the course of 2017. |
Expansion plans | |
IAG issued a profit warning after the Brexit referendum in June, and in October it warned that ticket prices might have to rise as a result of sterling's fall. | |
Airlines normally buy their fuel in dollars, but a sharp drop in fuel costs has helped counter some of the adverse currency fluctuations. | |
IAG's fuel costs fell by nearly 20% last year. It is also continuing to restructure and cut costs. | |
The company added that, at current fuel prices and exchange rates, it expected to report an increase in operating profit this year. | |
IAG is planning to start low-cost transatlantic flights from Barcelona this year to destinations in the US. The Spanish airport is home to IAG's low-cost carrier, Vueling. | |
It is going head-to-head with budget operators such as Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, which is expanding. |
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