Lufthansa boosts operating profit

German airline Deutsche Lufthansa reported an improved operating result in all its divisions in the first half of 2005, despite…

German airline Deutsche Lufthansa reported an improved operating result in all its divisions in the first half of 2005, despite rising fuel costs.

Lufthansa's core passenger airline business posted a 78 per cent rise in first-half operating profit to €103 million as passenger yields improved and traffic grew 4 per cent, the airline said today. Yields, or average revenue per passenger carried and kilometre flown, rose 1.6 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier, helping first-half yields improve slightly by 0.1 per cent.

The news boosted shares in the airline by almost 3 per cent this morning.

Lufthansa's cargo division posted a €20 million first-half operating profit, reversing a year-earlier loss of €3 million.

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Fuel costs rose 42 per cent to a record €1.1 billion in the first half, though hedging helped the group cut the bill by €111 million.

"All of our business segments improved their result," said chief executive Wolfgang Mayrhuber in a statement. "We have strengthened our sound financial base."

Lufthansa surprised analysts late yesterday when it reported first-half group operating profit that beat average estimates. The company raised its 2005 operating profit forecast to more than €400 million. It had said it expected profit to remain at last year's level of €383 million.

The company said it has implemented savings measures worth €606 million so far this year, compared with a target for 2005 of €780 million.