14.02.2008 06:30:00
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Aeroports de Paris: Strong Revenue Growth in Full-Year 2007: +10.4%(1)
Regulatory News:
Aéroports de Paris: (Pink Sheets:AEOPF)
(Paris:ADP):
Cumulative revenues at 31 December 2007:
(€ million)
31 December 2007
31 December 2006
% change
Airport services
1,836.9
1,726.4
+6.4% Airport fees 731.7 667.1 +9.7% Specialized services 112.2 103.7 +8.3% Commercial revenue 230.0 210.8 +9.1% Car parks and access fees 150.4 143.8 +4.5% Industrial services 69.2 68.8 +0.7% Airport security tax 366.4 356.3 +2.8% Rental revenue 82.7 70.4 +17.4% Other revenue 94.3 105.5 -10.6%
Real estate
194.2
175.7
+10.5%
Ground handling & other services
195.3
177.1
+10.3%
Other activities
326.9
226.3
+44.4%
Intersegment eliminations
-260.9
-228.7
+14.1% Consolidated revenue
2,292.4
2,076.8
+10.4%
Quarterly revenue growth:
(€ million)
Q1 2007
Q1 2006
% change
Q2 2007
Q2 2006
% change Q3 2007
Q3 2006
% change
Q4 2007
Q4 2006
% change
Airport services
414.9
396.1
+4.8%
457.4
431.3
+6.1%
491.4
446.6
+10.0%
473.2
452.4
+4.6%
Real estate
47.6
41.2
+15.6%
47.8
45.2
+5.7%
48.9
44.1
+10.9%
49.9
45.2
+10.4%
Ground handling & other services
43.4
38.5
+12.6%
50.1
44.3
+13.2%
53.2
49.8
+6.9%
48.6
44.6
+9.0%
Other activities
70.4
52.7
+33.4%
76.2
55.8
+36.6%
85.4
54.6
+56.5%
94.9
63.3
+50.0%
Intersegment eliminations
-61.1
-52.9
+15.5%
-65.4
-60.3
+8.4%
-64.8
-54.0
+19.8%
-69.7
-61.4
+13.4% Total
515.2
475.6
+8.3%
566.2
516.2
+9.7% 614.1
540.9
+13.5%
596.9
544.0
+9.7%
Pierre Graff, Chairman and CEO of Aéroports
de Paris, commented on these figures:
"For the fourth consecutive year, Aéroports
de Paris is the leader among Europe's three largest airports in terms of
traffic growth. Our strong revenue growth validates the pertinence of
our strategy, which aims to make our airports more attractive and to
develop our retail and real estate activities. Internationally, we
continue to be commercially successful in a fiercely competitive
environment, confirming the excellent reputation and solid expertise of
our subsidiaries, ADPi and Aéroports de Paris
Management."
Key events during the period Aéroports de Paris ranks number one in
traffic growth among Europe's three largest airports
Aéroports de Paris handled 86.4 million
passengers in 2007, a record high. Passenger traffic growth was very
robust, up 4.7% compared to the previous year. Traffic growth was
particularly strong at the Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport, up 5.4% to
59.9 million passengers, while traffic at the Paris-Orly airport
increased 3.2% to 26.4 million passengers.
During the year, passenger traffic reached a peak in March, and the
summer season was also very strong: passenger traffic rose 6.2% in July,
8.0% in August and 5.4% in September, bolstered, for this last month, by
the Rugby World Cup games. Labour unrest in the air transport sector had
an estimated impact of 25 basis points on annual passenger traffic
growth, two thirds due to strikes in October and a third to those in
December. In terms of traffic growth, this performance places Aéroports
de Paris among the leaders of Europe's top five airports, and for the
fourth consecutive year, it ranked number one among Europe’s
three largest airports.
Buoyant European and international traffic
In 2007, passenger traffic was once again driven by very strong growth
in European traffic, up 7%, building on the 8.3% growth reported in
2006. This is mainly due to the boom in low-cost carriers, which
increased 27.5% at Aéroports de Paris
airports in 2007, and accounted for 11% of Parisian traffic at the end
of the year. In Europe, traffic by low-cost carriers increased 41.7%
with the countries in the Schengen area, where most of the main cities
served by LCCs are located (Nice, Milan, Barcelona, etc.).
All in all, the strongest growth in European traffic was with Spain, up
15.2% and Italy, up 12.1%.
In France, traffic declined 1.7% due to the opening of the new East TGV
bullet train line in June 2007 and to labour unrest in the air transport
sector in October and December.
Traffic to other international destinations, including many sources of
future growth, increased 5.9%. The biggest contributors to growth in
2007 were Africa (+7.8%), buoyed by a surge in North African traffic,
and the Middle East (+14.7%), thanks to the dynamic growth of local
airlines serving Dubai, Bahrain and Qatar. Latin America also reported
strong traffic growth, up 6.9%, thanks to the rapid development of
traffic with Brazil and the impact of September’s
Rugby World Cup games on traffic with Argentina. Traffic with the French
overseas territories rebounded 6.1% after a tough year in 2006. The
Asia-Pacific region reported milder growth of 1.6%, reflecting feeble
growth with India and Singapore, but buoyant traffic with China, up
6.2%. Traffic in the mature North American market rose a satisfactory
2.9%.
The number of aircraft movements increased slightly, up 1.9% to 776,801,
with a 2% increase at Paris-Charles de Gaulle and a 1.6% increase at
Paris-Orly. These figures reflect the improvement in the passenger load
ratio (66.3% in 2007 vs 66.1% in 2006) and capacity (117 passengers per
flight in 2007 vs 114 in 2006).
The vigour of business jet traffic was confirmed, with 70,775 aircraft
movements, up 9.4% in 2007. The Paris-Le Bourget airport has been
Europe's leading business aviation airport since 1981.
The cargo and mail activity is still very robust, with cargo shipments
up 7.5% to 2.41 million tons, including a 7.8% increase to 2.3 million
tons at Paris-Charles de Gaulle. Aéroports de
Paris is the leader among European airports for cargo and mail.
Revenues by segment 2 Revenue growth of 6.4% in airport services
Revenues from airport services increased 6.4% to €1,836.9
million in 2007 thanks to robust passenger traffic growth, higher
airport fees as of 1 April 2007 and strong growth in commercial revenues.
Airport fee revenues (passenger fees and aircraft landing,
parking, fuelling and lighting fees) were up 9.7% to €731.7
million, thanks to a 4.7% increase in passenger traffic, a 1.9%
increase in aircraft movements and the application of a 4.25% rate
hike as of 1 April 2007.
Specialized services, a category consisting of ancillary fees
(baggage handling, check-in counters, de-icing) and other services
(VIP lounges, network leasing), generated revenues of €112.2
million, up 8.3%.
Baggage handling revenues increased strongly thanks notably to the
increase in the amount of baggage handled, the fee increase on 1 April
2007, and the full-year impact of the April 2006 start-up of the
Terminal 2E South baggage sorting system at the Paris-Charles de Gaulle
airport.
In full-year 2007, de-icing services declined 7.8% due to the net
decline in volumes handled. The increase in the number of de-iced planes
since October 2007 only partially offset the sluggishness of this
activity at the beginning of the year due to a particularly mild winter
in 2006-07.
Commercial revenues (shops, bars & restaurants, car rentals and
advertising) increased 9.1% to €230 million.
Shops in restricted areas reported buoyant revenues, up 12.5%, thanks to
strong passenger traffic growth and a net increase in business. These
strong performances illustrate the pertinence of the Aéroports
de Paris programme of expanding retail areas. The shops in the Galerie
Parisienne reported excellent performances.
The strong growth in bar and restaurant revenues was confirmed, up 13.6%
for the year.
Car park and access revenues rose 4.5% to €150.4
million despite the loss of a subsidy from the Ile de France transport
union (STIF), previously accounted for in this segment, which was
eliminated with the start-up of the CDG Val automatic shuttle on 1
April 2007. Excluding the STIF effect, the healthy growth of this
activity was confirmed, up 9.5%, buoyed by the ongoing increase in
hourly revenues and subscriptions.
Revenue from industrial services (such as power and water
supply) increased 0.7% to €69.2 million.
All activities contributed to this full-year performance with the
exception of heating, air conditioning and cooling services. These
services were hit by the decline in the adjustable part of rates
applicable to thermal energy, which are indexed to gas purchase
prices, and to smaller volumes of heating sales during the very mild
winter of 2006-07.
Airport security tax revenue, which mainly finances
security-related activities, increased 2.8% to €366.4
million.
Rental revenues from leasing space in air terminals rose a
buoyant 17.4% to €82.7 million over the
full year. This robust performance is due to the indexation of prices
to the cost of construction index, up 7.05% since 1 January 2007, and
to the leasing of new retail areas in airport terminals, notably La
Galerie Parisienne in the Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport in the
second half of 2007.
Other revenues declined 10.6% to €94.3
million. This is mainly due to the reduction in services for the Civil
Aviation Authorities (DGAC) and the end of the Aérobus
service in June 2006.
Real estate segment (excluding terminals) continues to develop
rapidly
The strong revenue performance of the real estate segment, up
10.5% to €194.2 million in 2007, can be
attributed to a combination of several factors:
Higher rents, indexed to the cost of construction index, up 7.05% at 1
January 2007,
The full-year impact of marketing new surface areas leased in 2006
(Air France Maintenance Hub, West Maintenance Hub for the future A380
and the Fedex logistics centre at the Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport),
The start-up of marketing for the new GB2 cargo station at the
Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport as of 1 July 2007, accompanied by the
leasing of additional surface areas in the GB4 cargo station,
Renegotiation and regularisation of certain rates,
Regularisation of rental charges combined with better rebilling.
Ground handling: business picks up in a restructuring context Ground handling and related services generated revenues of €195.3
million in 2007, up 10.3% from the previous year. All activities
contributed to this performance (ground handling, security and other
services).
Revenues from ground-handling services rose 8.3%, benefiting from new
contracts signed in a fiercely competitive environment in 2006 and 2007,
notably with Vueling, Varig, Fly Niki and BMI Baby at the Paris-Charles
de Gaulle airport and with TUI at the Paris-Orly airport.
Other activities (subsidiaries and joint ventures) report very
strong revenue growth Other activities generated full-year revenues of €326.9
million, up 44.4%.
Owned in partnership with the airport-retailing expert Aelia, Société
de Distribution Aéroportuaire (SDA) operates
shops specialising in alcohol, tobacco, perfume and cosmetics in all
of the Aéroports de Paris terminals as well
as the gourmet food shops in Terminal 2F. SDA’s
contribution increased 63.9% to €163.6
million.3 Its scope of business (excluding
gourmet food) was expanded to Terminal 3 at Paris-Charles de Gaulle on
1 November 2006 and to the two terminals at Paris-Orly (Orly Sud and
Orly Ouest) on 1 January 2007, creating a consolidation effect of
46.7%. Excluding this consolidation effect, SDA's contribution rose
17.2%, thanks to buoyant sales in shops located in restricted areas.
Hub Télécom
reported full-year revenues of €84.6m, up
14.4%. Acquired on 12 July 2007, BGI Technologie, a Lyon-based
specialist in mobile solutions for companies, with expertise in
traceability, geopositioning and video monitoring, reported revenues
in line with expectations. Excluding the consolidation effect, Hub
Telecom's revenue growth was 6.9 %.
ADPi, the engineering subsidiary specialising in international
design, architecture and engineering services, expanded at a
remarkable pace in 2007, with revenues up 90.5% to €64
million. This performance reflects its commercial success, notably in
the Middle East and Africa, with the signing of new contracts in Libya
(Tripoli, Benghazi and Sebah airports), Saudi Arabia (Jeddah airport,
including the renovation of the Hajj terminal and extension of the
North and South terminals), the Sultanate of Oman and Pakistan
(Islamabad), as well as in South America (Bogotá,
Colombia).
Aéroports de Paris Management, the
airport management subsidiary with stakes in other airport companies,
generated revenues of €10.6 million, up
32.8%. The subsidiary benefited from the signing of new contracts and
investment in minority stakes, notably a 25-year operating contract
for the Queen Alia airport in Amman, Jordan, and a management contract
for the Hajj Terminal of the Jeddah airport.
Upcoming events:
Full-year 2007 earnings will be released on 13 March 2008, with a press
conference at 8:30 a.m. and an analysts meeting at 10:30 a.m., to be
broadcast live on our website: http://www.aeroportsdeparis.fr/
.
First-quarter 2008 revenues: 14 May 2008
Annual General Meeting of shareholders: 28 May 2008
1 Unless indicated otherwise, all percentages
in this press release compare 2007 data with comparable data from 2006.
2 Before intersegment eliminations
3 ADP's share
www.aeroportsdeparis.fr
Aéroports de Paris builds, develops and
manages airports including Paris-Orly, Paris-Charles de Gaulle and
Paris-Le Bourget. Aéroports de Paris is
Europe's second-largest airport services group in terms of airport
revenues and the European leader for cargo and mail. Aéroports
de Paris accommodates nearly 460 airlines, including the main companies
in the air transport industry.
With an exceptional geographic location and a major trading area, the
Group is pursuing its strategy of modernizing its terminal facilities
and upgrading the quality of services, and also intends to develop its
retail and real estate business. In 2007, Aéroports
de Paris Group had revenues of €2,292.4
million and handled 86.4 million passengers.
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