Wizz Air steps up expansion in UK as Omicron curbs ease

 

Bloomberg

Wizz Air Holdings Plc is scouring its European operations for planes and staff to boost UK capacity amid mounting optimism that test-free travel will spur a comeback in demand by the summer.
Bookings are up as Britain prepares to scrap testing for vaccinated arrivals after the omicron variant of Covid-19 pushed Wizz to a loss last quarter. Chief Executive Officer Jozsef Varadi bought slots at London Gatwick airport last month and said Wednesday he may seek more, while bringing in more flights from elsewhere.
Governments hit first by omicron are starting to reverse border clampdowns instituted late last year. The UK will end testing from February 11 and the European Union has said it also plans to drop requirements for those who are fully vaccinated. The changes have infused airlines with confidence that after a two-year slump, demand will finally return for good.
“Continental Europe is probably a few weeks behind the UK but I would be expecting very similar trends” Varadi said in a Bloomberg TV interview. The company is weighing whether “we should be executing plans earlier and more as a result of a largely improving market in the UK.”
Shares of Wizz rose as much as 5% and were trading 3.4% higher as of 10:19 am in London. European travel and leisure was the best-performing sector on the Stoxx 600 on rising optimism about Covid’s retreat.
Wizz reported an operating loss of 213.6 million euros ($241 million) in the fiscal third quarter through December, as omicron curbed demand and the Hungarian discounter spent money ramping up flights, according to a statement.
Lingering uncertainty over travel is likely to impact bookings over the coming weeks, the airline said, leading to a higher loss in the fiscal fourth quarter through March. It had previously forecast a 200 million-euro loss for the December quarter that could carry over into early 2022.
Varadi said he’s optimistic that demand will recover through spring, allowing near-full utilization of the Wizz fleet from summer onwards. With Wizz seeing a “profound” increase in UK demand, Varadi is steering more inbound flights to Gatwick to augment planes based there. He’ll also boost utilization of the carrier’s London Luton base, ramp up flights from Doncaster in northern England and resume operations from Cardiff, Wales. “We are squeezing more juice out of the lemon,” Varadi said. Tighter slot-usage rules for summer could also provide the opportunity to add capacity at Gatwick after Wizz bought 15 daily takeoff and landing positions from Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA in December.

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