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Ryanair's O'Leary witnesses a surge in Easter bookings due to Middle East conflict

Ryanair's CEO stated on Tuesday that Easter bookings have increased to European destinations, as people avoid the Middle East because of the regional conflict. He added that he did not expect a "big" impact in the long-term.

The conflict between Israel, the U.S. and Iran has disrupted flights worldwide, shut down key Middle Eastern hubs, and sent oil prices soaring. Analysts warned of weeks of disruption.

Michael O'Leary said at a press conference that there has been a huge drop in bookings for the Middle East and an increase in short-haul flights within Europe.

"But I do not think that it will have any fundamental impact or change on... longer-term booking trends into May June and July."

Priority is to REPATRIATE CUSTOMERS TO?JORDAN

O'Leary stated that Ryanair's top priority was to return customers to Jordan during this current disruption, and it did not have much spare capacity to assist with other repatriations.

The Middle East conflict has pushed up oil prices by roughly 30% this year. This could drive up jet fuel costs and affect airline profits.

O'Leary claimed that this wouldn't affect Ryanair, as the airline was adequately hedged against rising oil prices.

He said, "We hedged our costs for the next 12 months at $67 per barrel up to March 2027." "It won't impact our low fares and won't effect our costs." Reporting by Alan Charlish and Anna Wlodarczak Semczuk, Editing by Bernadette B. Baum

(source: Reuters)