Travel company TUI lowered winter capacity plans due to the emergence of the Omicron coronavirus variant as it reported its first quarterly profit since the start of the pandemic.
The company on Wednesday said capacity would “likely” be modified towards the lower end of winter plans of between 60% – 80%. Core earnings for the final quarter came in at โฌ160m. Pre-tax losses for the three months to September 30 came in at โฌ71m, compared to year-on-year losses of โฌ836 million.
Despite the slowdown in winter sales, TUI said it expected bookings in summer 2022 to return to pre-pandemic levels after posting a full-year loss of more than โฌ2bn, reflecting the impact of coronavirus restrictions through most of its fiscal year.
Annual revenue for the period fell to โฌ4.73bn compared with โฌ7.94bn a year earlier.
TUI added that it was hitting 69% of pre-crisis levels in the first quarter of the new financial year.
“We are generating significant cash inflows and achieving positive results again in many markets and with our hotels and TUI hotel brands,” said chief executive Fritz Joussen.
The company, which owns travel agencies, hotels, airlines and cruise ships, had recorded 4.1 million bookings for this winter and summer 2022.
“At this early stage, we believe summer 2022 volumes will recover close to normalised summer 2019 levels, supported by the stronger starting position and a travel environment underpinned by the continued success of vaccinations,” TUI said in a statement.
“It remains difficult to forecast the further course of the pandemic and its impact on customer behaviour. In view of the uncertain environment, the executive board believes it would not be appropriate to issue a specific forecast for the new financial year 2022 at this time.”




