Julia Kollewe 

Tui expects leap in profits as winter break bookings rise

Travel group says the Canaries, Egypt, Cape Verde, Thailand and Mexico are popular this season
  
  

People are spending more on winter breaks to sunny destinations like Thailand.
People are spending more on winter breaks to sunny destinations like Thailand. Photograph: Mladen Antonov/AFP/Getty Images

Europe’s largest travel company expects its annual profits to rise by at least a quarter, helped by people spending more on winter breaks to sunny destinations such as Egypt, Cape Verde, Thailand and Mexico.

Tui also said summer sales rose by 6%, helped by late bookings, for which Spain, Greece and Turkey were the most sought-after destinations. Tui has taken a further 1.4m bookings since its August update, to 14.7m for the summer. It sold nearly all of its holidays, and was slightly ahead of last year.

Tui has put up its prices, by 3% for the summer and 5% this winter, to mitigate rising costs, it said.

In Germany, Tui added more summer holidays after the owner of Europe’s third-largest operator, FTI Group, filed for insolvency in June, mainly to Turkey, Greece, the Balearics, the Canaries, and Egypt, and reported a 10% increase in bookings.

On the winter season Tui said it had a “promising start”, with bookings up 7%, “as consumers continue to prioritise spend for leisure experiences”. As well as Egypt and Cape Verde, the Canaries are popular again, while for long-haul destinations the Dominican Republic is in demand, along with Thailand and Mexico.

Demand for more expensive holidays has gone up, including dynamic packages where holidaymakers can book flights with other airlines than Tui and choose their own accommodation and car rental.

In the UK, bookings are similar to the high levels of the previous winter, with 40% of holidays sold so far.

Holidaymakers are turning to package holidays, as soaring hotel and flight prices revive demand for all-inclusive deals.

“If holidaymakers are not linked to school holidays, it is more attractive for them to move their holiday to the so-called ‘shoulder months’,” a spokesperson said.

More people are going away during shoulder season – the time between a region’s most popular months and the off-season – and there has been an increase in demand between March and early May, and September to October, as holidaymakers try to avoid heatwaves and overtourism.

Tui’s cruise business offered 12% more passenger cruise days over the summer than a year earlier, after the launch of its seventh ship branded as Mein Schiff. It runs 17 ships focused on the Mediterranean, northern Europe and North America, while its Hapag-Lloyd division offers cruises to Asia and Antarctica. “Early booking indications for the winter season bode well,” the firm said. However, occupancy levels have fallen as a result of late changes to itineraries because of the escalating conflict in the Middle East.

The company expects underlying earnings before interest and tax to increase by at least 25% this year from last year’s €977m.

A Hargreaves Lansdown analyst, Aarin Chiekrie, said: “Markets remain a little more optimistic than this, seeing room for more than 30% growth … Hotels and resorts are set for further growth in the new year as Tui continues to expand its portfolio, offering customers new choices in key destinations.”

Tui ditched its London stock market listing in June , and is now only listed on the Frankfurt stock exchange. Investors voted overwhelmingly (98.4%) in February to drop the UK listing, in a further blow to London’s standing as an international finance hub. Tui’s shares rose by 1.4% in Frankfurt on Tuesday.

 

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