Budget airline Flybe goes up for sale – weeks after issuing profit warning
The airline is in talks to be bought out by several companies and is also looking at cutting down on its flight capacity
BUDGET airline Flybe is in talks about going up for sale weeks after it issued a profit warning.
The Exeter-based carrier is also looking into cutting its number of flights and other money-saving measures.
It is in talks with a number of companies about selling itself off.
It comes weeks after Flybe warned over profits following falling demand and a £29 million hit from rising fuel costs and the weak pound.
The alert sent shares tumbling by more than a third on the day and nearly 75 per cent has been wiped off its stock market value since December.
Stobart Group walked away from a bid to buy Flybe in March after the two firms failed to agree terms.
But Stobart, which already has a franchise agreement with Flybe, could reportedly come back into the frame.
Flybe has 78 planes operating from smaller airports including London City, Southampton and Norwich, and flies to destinations across the UK and Europe.
It carries around eight million passengers a year.
In half-year results also announced on Wednesday, Flybe saw cost-cutting help lift underlying pre-tax profits to £9.9 million from £9.2 million a year earlier.
Statutory pre-tax profits for the six months to September 30 more than halved to £7.4 million from £16.1 million a year earlier.
It saw group revenues fall 10 per cent or 2.4 per cent on an underlying basis to £409.2 million after it cut capacity by 9 per cent.
Passenger numbers edged 0.6 per cent higher to 5.2 million.
Chief executive Christine Ourmieres-Widener said the group continued to see improvements in the third quarter and added that cost savings had already helped to drive progress in boosting profits.
But she added: "There has been a recent softening in growth in the short-haul market, as well as continued headwinds from higher fuel and currency costs."
She continued: "We are responding to this by reviewing every aspect of our business, especially further capacity reduction, cash management and cost savings."
Sun Online Travel has contacted Flybe for comment.
We previously revealed that a Flybe flight nosedived 500 feet in 18 seconds after an autopilot error caused a plane to aim for the ground.