Shares in low-cost airlines Ryanair and easyJet rose sharply on Monday after rival Monarch collapsed into administration in the early hours of the morning.
Not long after European stock markets opened, shares in easyJet were up around 4 per cent, making the airline one of the biggest climbers on the FTSE 100 index.
Dublin-listed shares in Ryanair, hit by a recent staffing debacle that has led to the cancellation of thousands of flights, were up around 3 per cent.
“Usually what’s bad for one airline – higher fuel costs, terror attacks, air traffic control strikes – [is] bad for the sector. Shares in the various players have a tendency to track each other with some consistency,” said Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX Capital.
“But the failure of Monarch is good news for rivals. The third airline failure this year in Europe, after Alitalia and Air Berlin, is a symptom of over-capacity and overly-aggressive pricing,” he said.
All flights operated by Monarch from the UK and all future holidays booked with Monarch have been cancelled with immediate effect, prompting what the Government described as the country’s biggest ever peacetime repatriation of stranded travellers.
The collapse will also cost the jobs of around 2,750 staff.