Holidaymakers give Tui a surprise boost
Germany's biggest travel agency Tui has unexpectedly hit the black - thanks to the Germans and British going on holiday despite uncertain economic times.
The business year 2012-13, which in Tui's accounting system ended in September, showed a surplus of €4.3 million, compared to a deficit of €15.1 million in the year before, the company said on Wednesday.
Analysts asked for their forecasts by Reuters journalists had predicted a loss of €27.4 million, the Handelsblatt business newspaper reported.
But strong demand for exclusive holidays, the sale of a hotel, and less loss from the Hapag-Lloyd container shipping subsidiary fed into strong figures from British and German holidaymakers to turn the numbers around.
Shareholders will get a dividend of 15 cents per share - the first time dividends have been paid since 2007. Then the payment was 25 cent a share.
Tui's CEO Friedrich Joussen, only moved from telecoms firm Vodafone early this year to head up the holiday giant - not only Germany's but Europe's biggest tourism group. He has been restructuring Tui, to reduce costs and try to make the company sharp enough to take on internet-based rivals.
But that restructuring added €57 million to costs last year, the Handelsblatt said.
The major problem facing Tui lies in the fact that its travel business is almost completely concentrated on one market – the UK. Tui Travel in the UK provides more than 95 percent of the group's turnover. Last year the turnover reached €18.5 billion.
It operates 3,500 travel agent shops across Europe.
READ MORE: Majorca: boozy Germans no longer welcome
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The business year 2012-13, which in Tui's accounting system ended in September, showed a surplus of €4.3 million, compared to a deficit of €15.1 million in the year before, the company said on Wednesday.
Analysts asked for their forecasts by Reuters journalists had predicted a loss of €27.4 million, the Handelsblatt business newspaper reported.
But strong demand for exclusive holidays, the sale of a hotel, and less loss from the Hapag-Lloyd container shipping subsidiary fed into strong figures from British and German holidaymakers to turn the numbers around.
Shareholders will get a dividend of 15 cents per share - the first time dividends have been paid since 2007. Then the payment was 25 cent a share.
Tui's CEO Friedrich Joussen, only moved from telecoms firm Vodafone early this year to head up the holiday giant - not only Germany's but Europe's biggest tourism group. He has been restructuring Tui, to reduce costs and try to make the company sharp enough to take on internet-based rivals.
But that restructuring added €57 million to costs last year, the Handelsblatt said.
The major problem facing Tui lies in the fact that its travel business is almost completely concentrated on one market – the UK. Tui Travel in the UK provides more than 95 percent of the group's turnover. Last year the turnover reached €18.5 billion.
It operates 3,500 travel agent shops across Europe.
READ MORE: Majorca: boozy Germans no longer welcome
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