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Ryanair CEO O'Leary could earn 100 million Euros if he hits his share price target

Michael O'Leary, Ryanair's Chief Executive Officer, hit on Thursday a target share price that could bring him more than 100 million euros. He had told investors earlier in the month that this payout would be a good deal compared with football players' salaries.

The stock price of Europe's biggest low-cost airline closed Thursday above 21 euros for the 28th consecutive day. This met a condition set by a share-option plan, which was originally established in 2019 at the time of the COVID-19 Pandemic.

According to the annual report of the company, if O'Leary stays with Ryanair through July 2028, he can buy 10 million shares for 11.12 euros each.

The closing price on Thursday was 23.74 euro, which would be a discount worth 126 million Euros.

O'Leary responded to a question about the option during an analyst call in early October: "I believe we're providing exceptional value for Ryanair's shareholders, especially at a time when Premiership footballers are earning 20-25 million dollars yearly."

"I believe Ryanair shareholders get a special value from our share options, both mine and those of the rest of the Management Team," he said in the call after the airline announced an annual profit after tax of 1.6 billion euro.

A Ryanair spokesperson said earlier this week that the airline would not comment on the Thursday milestone, as the options will not vest for three more years.

O'Leary, in his three decades of being chief executive at Ryanair, has transformed the airline from a regional Irish carrier into Europe's biggest airline by number of passengers.

With 44.1 million shares, he is the eighth largest shareholder of the airline. This represents 4.15%. In the early 1990s, he was given a large stake during his first years as CEO.

Ryanair's stock price dropped to 8 euros just months after its 21 euro target. (Written by Conor Humphries, edited by Kirby Donovan).

(source: Reuters)