Air France-KLM reports worse than expected Q1 results as costs soar

Reuters

Published Apr 30, 2024 02:16AM ET

Updated Apr 30, 2024 02:47AM ET

By Joanna Plucinska and Diana Mandia

LONDON/GDANSK (Reuters) - Airline group Air France-KLM on Tuesday reported a higher than expected first quarter operating loss of 489 million euros ($524.31 million) as it faced high customer compensation at Dutch carrier KLM and one-off payments to staff.

European airlines have been struggling with climbing costs surrounding labour disruption and geopolitical turbulence in recent months, with German group Lufthansa issuing a profit warning earlier in April tied to strikes.

Still, Air France-KLM maintained its outlook, including a vow to keep a rise in unit costs capped at 1-2% for the 2024 financial year, even though they climbed to 4% in the first quarter.

"As anticipated, our operating income was impacted by disruption costs and a slower cargo business. We nonetheless remain confident in our ability to achieve our 2024 unit cost outlook," Chief Executive Ben Smith said in a statement.

Analysts had forecast the group's Q1 loss at 424 million euros, according to a company-compiled consensus, while last year's Q1 loss was 306 million euros.

Net income was also lower than forecast, with analysts expecting a loss of 407 million euros ($436.39 million) and the company reporting a loss of 480 million euros ($559.69 million).