Shares in Flybe plunged nearly 40 per cent in morning trading after the airline issued a profit warning citing “increasingly adverse fuel and currency impacts” as it went on to forecast softer market conditions in the second half of the year.
The low-cost UK carrier is expecting worse-than-expected losses of around £12 million for the year to the end of March 2019, even with a £10m one-off boost to its accounts connected to a lease.
In its latest half-year update, Flybe said as well as an expected £29m impact from fuel costs and a fall in the value of sterling, it was also seeing consumer demand weaken in domestic and near-continent markets in recent weeks.
Christine Ourmieres-Widener, chief executive of Flybe, said: "We have made progress in driving our unit revenues across the summer season, but we are now seeing a softening in the market.
"We are reviewing further capacity and cost-saving measures while continuing to focus on delivering our sustainable business improvement plan."
She said: "We continue to strengthen the underlying business and remain confident that our strategy will improve performance."
The firm also said revival efforts had helped its load factor, a measure of how well it fills its planes, by 7.2 percentage points to a record 86.6% over the quarter to the end of September, while passenger revenue per seat lifted 6.8%.
Flybe was also cited in part as helping boost record numbers at Edinburgh Airport in September.
Gerald Khoo, airline analyst at Liberum, said it is clear that "external industry-wide headwinds from weaker demand and a more challenging environment on fuel and foreign exchange continue to more than offset management's actions".
Shares dropped by as much as 39% to 20.3p after it issued the profit alert.
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