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Tour Operator TUI Cuts Profit Outlook, Airlines Juggle Jet Fuel Hit

  • TUI suspends revenue guidance citing Iran war, jet fuel supplies
  • European airlines warn of profit margin pressure, capacity cuts
  • TUI repatriated 10,000 passengers since start of Iran war

LONDON, April 22 (Reuters) - Europe's largest tour operator TUI cut its underlying operating profit forecast and suspended ‌its revenue guidance, citing uncertainty caused by the Iran war, prompting its shares to fall by 2.6% on Wednesday.

TUI, which operates its own fleet of aircraft and is exposed to travel disruptions and tight jet fuel supplies, joined airlines from easyJet to Wizz ​Air in warning of the negative impact of the conflict.

"TUI shares are down 25% in the last ​3 months pricing in some of this effect," Bernstein analysts said.

European airlines are set ⁠to report first-quarter results from next week and analysts expect broad capacity cuts and further profit warnings as ​the impact of curtailed jet fuel supplies and spiralling costs roils the sector worldwide.

TUI expects underlying earnings before interest ​and taxes (EBIT) for its fiscal year ending September 30, 2026 to be in the range of 1.1 billion euros to 1.4 billion euros ($1.3 billion to $1.6 billion). It had previously expected an increase of 7% to 10% from 1.4 billion in the previous year.

"While ​continuing to demonstrate strong operational improvement in H1 FY 2026, the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and the ​uncertainty surrounding its duration continue to limit near-term visibility and drive consumer caution," it said.

TUI said in a statement its airlines ‌segment ⁠as well as its hotels business have suffered from a partial shift in customer demand from Eastern to Western Mediterranean destinations, with a drop in demand for Turkey, Cyprus and Egypt in particular.

TUI's markets and airline segment makes up more than two-thirds of its revenue.

JET FUEL HEDGING HELPS RESILIENCE

Customers were also showing more caution and booking closer ​to departure dates, TUI said. ​Britain's easyJet warned of a ⁠similar trend earlier this month.

TUI expects an improvement to underlying EBIT at constant currency of 5 million to 25 million euros on a loss of 207 million euros ​in the previous year for the second quarter.

It said payoffs on efficiency programmes targeting ​its airline ⁠business should help absorb about 40 million euros in extra costs from the Iran war incurred in March, including repatriation efforts and related operational disruptions.

TUI said it was 83% hedged for jet fuel for this summer, which was helping it ⁠stay ​resilient despite price volatility.

Since the conflict began with U.S.-Israeli strikes on ​Iran on February 28, TUI said it had repatriated around 10,000 people in March, including about 5,000 passengers from cruise ships Mein Schiff 4 and ​Mein Schiff 5.

($1 = 0.8511 euros)

Reporting by Linda Pasquini and Joanna Plucinska Editing by Miranda Murray, Tomasz Janowski and Alexander Smith

Source: Reuters


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