Ryanair (IE:RYA) reported a 9 per cent increase in third-quarter revenue on the back of a 6 per cent increase in passenger numbers and a 3 per cent rise in fares per passenger.
However, net profit fell by 80 per cent to just 鈧30mn (拢26mn) as the company was hit with a 鈧256mn fine from Italy鈥檚 competition authority in December, for what it described as the airline鈥檚 鈥渁buse of a dominant market position鈥.
Ryanair has a share of about 40 per cent of the Italian market and the regulator, Autorit脿 Garante Della Concorrenza E Del Mercato (AGCM), argued that the airline had made buying flights through online travel agents and other third parties more difficult.
Ryanair has only taken a provision for a third of the fine, though, with chief executive Michael O鈥橪eary describing it as 鈥渂aseless鈥 and arguing that its lawyers were confident of having it overturned on appeal.
Without the fine, net profit was about a fifth lower year-on-year at 鈧115mn, which was higher than analysts鈥 expectations. Full-year net profit before one-offs will come in at between 鈧2.13bn-鈧2.23bn, management said.
Deutsche analysts said consensus forecasts were already at the top end of that range, though, and Ryanair shares fell by 1 per cent.




