British Airways owner IAG signals maiden dividend

Group confident of increasing profit by more than 10% a year between 2016 and 2020

British Airways owner IAG laid out plans to pay a maiden dividend, coming of age three years after it was created in a merger between BA and Spain's Iberia.

International Airlines Group said it was confident of increasing profit by more than 10 per cent a year between 2016 and 2020, on top of significant growth this year and next. As a result it said it anticipated announcing next year that it would start paying shareholders.

“We remain confident in meeting our 2015 financial targets which we see as the trigger to introducing a dividend,” it said in a statement ahead of an investor day on Friday.

BA and Iberia sealed an $8 billion merger in 2011, a move which helped both stem huge losses following the worst industry downturn in decades. Years of tough restructuring followed - with thousands of job cuts and salary and capacity reductions.

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Before the 2011 tie-up, neither BA nor Iberia had paid a dividend since 2008.

The dividend due to be introduced next year would be based on a payout ratio of 25 per cent of the company’s underlying profit after tax, IAG said.

The restructuring plus the introduction of new, more fuel efficient planes has put IAG on a strong footing, leaving its European rivals fighting to keep up in the face of competition from short-haul budget airlines and long-haul Gulf carriers.

It has outperformed Air France-KLM and Lufthansa , which have a history of stormy relations with their powerful unions and have been hit by strikes.

Also helping IAG’s profits are the healthier economic growth in the British and US economies - to which it has more exposure due to its strong trans-Atlantic business - compared with the French and German economies on which the rival airlines are more reliant.

And while Lufthansa and Air France try to expand their discount operations and reduce costs to compete with budget carriers like Ryanair and easyJet, IAG has already been benefiting from its acquisition of Spanish no-frills airline Vueling in 2013.

Shares in IAG, which have jumped about 20 per cent over the last month against a 1.3 per cent rise Britain’s bluechip index , were up 0.7 per cent at 0952 GMT.

Looking to the 2016 to 2020 period, IAG said it would target average earnings per share (EPS) growth of over 10 per cent a year and an operating profit margin of 10 to 14 percent.

It already expects to increase operating profit by as much as 78 per cent in 2014, and by a further 31 per cent to 1.8 billion euros in 2015.

IAG powered ahead in the quarter, in contrast to Air France-KLM which warned on 2014 profit and Lufthansa, which lowered its guidance for next year’s profit.

Reuters