Dubai carrier Emirates and other airlines have little concern over Brexit

Dubai carrier's boss Tim Clark is in agreement with fellow airlines that UK's decision to leve the EU has not caused lasting turbulence.

An Emirates Airbus A380 aircraft is seen above roof tops as it comes into land at Heathrow Airport. Justin Tallis / AFP
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The Emirates chief says Brexit is not a primary concern for the carrier, while other airline executives say Britain is in a position to woo even more visitors than before because of the weak pound.

“Brexit is just one of many things that happened in the global economy,” said Tim Clark, the president of Emirates. “We have more important things to worry about than that.”

More than two months after the United Kingdom’s vote to exit the European Union sent airlines running for cover, carriers such as British Airways, Emirates and easyJet have concluded the fallout on traffic will be manageable.

While last-minute summer bookings plunged and fares extended their drop in the immediate aftermath of the June 23 referendum, corporate travel demand is expected to come back.

Carriers in Europe were already struggling before the vote with weak economic growth and the effects of terrorist attacks in cities including Paris, Brussels and Istanbul that have discouraged leisure and business travel. EasyJet, the region’s second-biggest discount airline, offered its first-ever summer fare promotions this year, while larger low-fare rival Ryanair and the German mainline carrier Deutsche Lufthansa either cut 2016 profit forecasts or said targets were at risk.

“There was definitely a short-term trading effect” on sales immediately after the Brexit vote, but “from a longer-term point of view, nothing has changed,” the easyJet chief executive Carolyn McCall said at an airline conference in London.

“It was a seismic political decision for this country to take, and no one can underestimate that,” she said. “But actually everything we’re doing today is the same.”

The pound’s drop on foreign exchange markets following the Brexit referendum has bolstered travel to the UK by making visits cheaper, offsetting less demand from Britons because of rising trip costs, said the Norwegian Air Shuttle chief executive Bjoern Kjos.

The currency’s decline “hit us in one way, but that ramps up the volume as well,” he said. “We see more and more people like to fly into the UK.”

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