Previous close | 16.30 |
Open | 16.30 |
Bid | 16.16 x N/A |
Ask | 16.16 x N/A |
Day's range | 15.99 - 16.36 |
52-week range | 10.09 - 17.40 |
Volume | |
Avg. volume | 1,282,483 |
Market cap | 18.382B |
Beta (5Y monthly) | 1.43 |
PE ratio (TTM) | 14.28 |
EPS (TTM) | N/A |
Earnings date | N/A |
Forward dividend & yield | N/A (N/A) |
Ex-dividend date | 12 Feb 2015 |
1y target est | N/A |
Ryanair said on Thursday it did not see a risk of the European Union introducing minimum prices or compulsory limits on flights because it would disenfranchise poorer people, making it politically impossible. French Transport Minister Clement Beaune said this week he would seek support from other EU countries for a minimum price on flights in Europe in a bid to reduce the aviation sector's contribution to climate change. The Dutch government also said this month it would move ahead with plans to cap the number of flights at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport next year, pending EU approval, in a bid to reduce noise pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.
Ryanair said on Thursday it will cut 17 routes from its winter schedule at its home base in Dublin and allocate 19 new Boeing 737 MAX planes to other European airports that offer incentives to fly quieter, lower CO2 emission aircraft. Ryanair plans to move some of the new MAX aircraft, which Boeing says use 15-20% less fuel and emit 40% less noise, to airports in Spain and Italy, as well as Britain's Luton Airport, Ryanair executive Eddie Wilson told a news conference.
ROME (Reuters) -Italy's antitrust agency opened an investigation on Wednesday into low-cost carrier Ryanair "for possible abuse of a dominant (market) position", the latest regulatory challenge in Italy for Europe's largest airline. Ryanair, which has expanded to become the largest carrier in Italy, is already in a dispute with the Italian government which is trying to hold down the price of domestic flights to its main islands at peak times. Ryanair said on Wednesday that internal Italian flights to Sicily would be cut by 10% in its latest winter schedule, blaming the government's planned price cap.