SynopsisRyanair reported its annual profit slightly exceeded expectations, reaching 2.26 billion euros. However, the airline cautioned that economic uncertainty, driven by higher oil prices and inflation fears, is likely to result in flat fare growth during the peak summer months. This outlook impacts the current fiscal year, with potential pressure on profits if oil prices remain elevated.ReutersRyanair on Monday warned that economic uncertainty looks likely to wipe out any growth in fares during its peak summer months as the Irish airline reported profit for the year to March slightly ahead of expectations. Europe's largest airline by passenger ‌numbers last ⁠week ⁠said it does not expect a disruption to jet fuel supplies in Europe this summer but its profit may come under "a bit of pressure" in the current fiscal year to the end of March 2027 if oil prices remain high for longer. On Monday, it reported an ⁠after-tax profit ‌of 2.26 billion euros ($2.63 billion) for the year that ended in March, compared with a forecast ⁠of 2.20 billion euros in a company poll of analysts. That did not include an exceptional 85-million-euro provision related to a fine from the Italian competition authority in December that it said it expects will be overturned on appeal. "Pricing in recent weeks has eased somewhat in response to economic uncertainty caused by ‌higher oil prices, the fear of fuel shortages and the risk of inflation adversely impacting consumer spending," the airline said ⁠in a statement. Pricing for the July-to-September quarter, which had earlier been expected to post annual gains in low-single-digit percentage terms, "is now trending broadly flat," the statement said. "With zero H2 visibility and significant fuel price/potential supply volatility it is far too early to provide any meaningful FY27 profit guidance at this time," it said. (Join our ETNRI WhatsApp channel for all the latest updates)...moreElevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea.Subscribe Now