Eased travel restrictions spur demand for Turkey, Greece: EasyJet
An easyJet Airbus plane taxis close to the northern runway at Gatwick Airport in Crawley, Britain, Aug. 25, 2021. (Reuters Photo)


The easing of travel restrictions has spurred demand for summer beach destinations such as Turkey, Greece and Spain, Britain’s easyJet said on Thursday, providing an injection of optimism for airlines after the shadow of omicron lifts.

Its CEO Johan Lundgren said bookings jumped in Britain when restrictions were reduced earlier this month and were boosted again when the government said testing requirements would end in February.

He said easyJet had seen similar trends across Europe, notably in France and Switzerland.

"We see a strong summer ahead, with pent-up demand that will see easyJet returning to near 2019 levels of capacity with U.K. beach and leisure routes performing particularly well," he said.

A survey conducted by easyJet suggests Britons plan to spend more on vacations than ever this year, with two-thirds citing a foreign trip as a priority, the CEO noted.

Traditional beach holidays are likely to recover quickest, Lundgren said, leading easyJet to target Greece and Turkey, with Spain also showing some "quite encouraging signs."

The airline will operate its largest number of flights between the U.K. and beach destinations this summer, according to the CEO.

With sales "performing very well," the low-cost airline’s capacity compared with 2019 levels will be more than doubled on routes to Turkey and up 36% for Greece, he added.

An overall 14% rise in capacity on routes between the U.K. and beach locations make those operations "the biggest ever" in easyJet’s 26-year history, he added.

The airline flew 64% of pre-pandemic capacity in its first quarter to end-December, but its 77% load factor missed its forecast of over 80% after the new variant of COVID-19 dented demand in December.

Omicron would continue to have a short-term impact, it said, although it will ramp up capacity from around 50% of pre-pandemic levels in January to 67% for the second quarter.

In November, before the impact of omicron was clear, easyJet had forecast a capacity of around 70% for the quarter.

Shares in easyJet, which have risen 6% in the last 12 months, were up 1% in early trading on Thursday.

Lundgren, who bolstered easyJet's balance sheet with a 1.2 billion pound ($1.6 billion) rights issue in September, said unlike other airlines that were retrenching, easyJet was adding capacity.

He said 1.1 million extra seats were on sale from its largest airport, London Gatwick, while it had launched 16 new routes from the U.K. and had added capacity to 30 destinations.

Total group revenue for easyJet's first quarter to end-December increased to 805 million pounds ($1.1 billion) against 165 million pounds a year ago, while its headline loss before tax for the quarter nearly halved to 213 million pounds.