Holiday giant Tui has revealed that annual earnings more than doubled after record sales and rising prices and the group expects another 25 per cent leap in operating profits over the year ahead.
But the company is potentially considering a trip of its own as it revealed it may delist from the London Stock Exchange (LSE) in favour of an MDAX listing in Frankfurt.
Tui, which has a joint listing in the UK and Frankfurt in Germany, said that in the past four years there had been a “notable liquidity migration from UK to Germany” in its share ownership.
It is now considering delisting from the LSE and switching its prime listing to Germany’s MDAX market, which is the index below the Dax.
It said possible advantages of the move include “potential benefits to European Union airline ownership and control requirements”.
Publishing its full-year results to the LSE, it said underlying earnings soared 139 per cent to 977.2 million euros (£836.7 million) in the year to September 30 as revenues hit an all-time high of 20.7 billion euros (£17.7 billion) – “significantly” higher than before the pandemic.
It posted pre-tax earnings of 551.2 million euros (£471.9 million) against losses of 145.9 million euros (£124.9 million) the previous year.
Tui said it expects underlying earnings to jump by at least a quarter over 2023-24, with sales set to increase by another 10 per cent at least.
But in a sign that there will be little respite for travellers from higher holiday prices and air fares in 2024, the group said bookings for the winter season were up 11 per cent, with average prices up 5 per cent.
It added that early indicators so far point to a strong summer season next year, with bookings up 13 per cent and prices 4 per cent higher.
The firm also warned that its guidance for the year ahead comes amid “current macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties, particularly in the Middle East”.
It said it has seen a temporary slowdown in bookings to Egypt due to the war between Hamas and Israel.
Rival easyJet said last week that the Gaza conflict and threat to stability across the Middle East had affected bookings across the board in October and November.
Tui chief executive Sebastian Ebel said: “2023 was a good year for Tui.
“We have significantly strengthened our core business and have new growth areas.”
He added: “The current winter bookings and the first indications for next summer lead us to expect a further improvement in 2024.”
Its board are considering whether to include the delisting proposal on its agenda for an AGM in February.
It would require 75 per cent shareholder approval to go ahead.
But the company is potentially considering a trip of its own as it revealed it may delist from the London Stock Exchange (LSE) in favour of an MDAX listing in Frankfurt.
Tui, which has a joint listing in the UK and Frankfurt in Germany, said that in the past four years there had been a “notable liquidity migration from UK to Germany” in its share ownership.
It is now considering delisting from the LSE and switching its prime listing to Germany’s MDAX market, which is the index below the Dax.
It said possible advantages of the move include “potential benefits to European Union airline ownership and control requirements”.
Publishing its full-year results to the LSE, it said underlying earnings soared 139 per cent to 977.2 million euros (£836.7 million) in the year to September 30 as revenues hit an all-time high of 20.7 billion euros (£17.7 billion) – “significantly” higher than before the pandemic.
It posted pre-tax earnings of 551.2 million euros (£471.9 million) against losses of 145.9 million euros (£124.9 million) the previous year.
Tui said it expects underlying earnings to jump by at least a quarter over 2023-24, with sales set to increase by another 10 per cent at least.
But in a sign that there will be little respite for travellers from higher holiday prices and air fares in 2024, the group said bookings for the winter season were up 11 per cent, with average prices up 5 per cent.
It added that early indicators so far point to a strong summer season next year, with bookings up 13 per cent and prices 4 per cent higher.
The firm also warned that its guidance for the year ahead comes amid “current macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties, particularly in the Middle East”.
It said it has seen a temporary slowdown in bookings to Egypt due to the war between Hamas and Israel.
Rival easyJet said last week that the Gaza conflict and threat to stability across the Middle East had affected bookings across the board in October and November.
Tui chief executive Sebastian Ebel said: “2023 was a good year for Tui.
“We have significantly strengthened our core business and have new growth areas.”
He added: “The current winter bookings and the first indications for next summer lead us to expect a further improvement in 2024.”
Its board are considering whether to include the delisting proposal on its agenda for an AGM in February.
It would require 75 per cent shareholder approval to go ahead.
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NewsTranscript
00:00 Hi, Chris Byrne here, Yorkshire Post Business Editor. There's been a really
00:04 interesting update today from TUI, the big holiday company I'm sure you'll all
00:08 have heard of, who've published their annual results, really good annual
00:11 results showing revenues up, people returning to holidays after the
00:15 pandemic. But they've said that they are considering delisting from the London
00:20 Stock Exchange in favour of pursuing a more premium listing in Germany. One
00:24 of the reasons for this is in regard to EU airline ownership and control
00:29 requirements. It's an interesting thing particularly because we recently ran a
00:33 piece in the Yorkshire Post by one of our columnists, a guy called Martin Towers,
00:37 where he was arguing that a London listing is no longer the gold standard
00:40 for a lot of companies. Obviously there could be different takes on that but
00:44 this TUI news seems to bear that out. It will take 75% of TUI shareholders to
00:51 agree to the move for it to happen and they're considering putting it to a vote
00:56 at their AGM in February.