Ryanair Cuts Passenger Growth Target Amid Boeing Jet Delays

Ryanair Holdings Plc cut its passenger growth target for next year because of delivery delays from aircraft supplier Boeing Co.

The Irish low-cost carrier now expects 210 million passengers in fiscal 2026, down from a previous goal of 215 million, according to a statement on Monday. Ryanair said that nine aircraft planned for delivery in the fiscal third quarter will now arrive in the following three months because of an ongoing strike at the aircraft manufacturer.

The outlook is “highly dependent on Boeing ending the strike sooner rather than later and production ramping up relatively quickly,” Chief Financial Officer Neil Sorahan said in an interview. “We think it’s sensible at this stage to allow for slightly slower growth.”

Ryanair could be left 10 aircraft short into next year’s peak summer season, the CFO said on Bloomberg TV.

Shares fell as much as 1.8% and were down 1.7% to €17.72 at 8:02 a.m. in Dublin.

Limiting passenger numbers to 210 million passengers may help increase yields, Stephen Furlong and Ava Costello, analysts at Davy, wrote in a note to clients after the results.

Ryanair is among airlines waiting for planes from Boeing, which is facing production quality issues as well as a workers strike. The manufacturer had to cap production of its top-selling jet following an almost catastrophic mid-air panel blowout on a 737 Max 9 in January.