Flight Centre Travel Group reported record total transaction value year-to-date alongside a significant near-term headwind from Middle East tensions that has already cost the company approximately $10 million in April profits. The leisure division bore the brunt of the impact, driven predominantly by forced refunds as customers cancelled or postponed travel plans amid regional uncertainty. The corporate travel business, by contrast, has shown resilience, remaining largely insulated from the disruption so far.
The timing of this volatility presents a particular challenge for Flight Centre. May and June typically represent the strongest leisure trading months for the company, yet the ongoing geopolitical uncertainty is expected to accelerate cancellations, refunds, and reduced forward bookings through the remainder of the financial year. Management flagged that while corporate travel has not been significantly impacted to date, potential spillover effects from higher airfare pricing and broader macroeconomic headwinds could emerge if volatility persists, though the company suggested such risks are more likely to materialise in early FY27 rather than the current financial year.
Against this near-term challenge sits evidence of structural improvement across the business. Flight Centre achieved its best cost margin in several years at 9.2% after the third quarter, well below pre-pandemic levels, while delivering a 13 percent productivity uplift across the global corporate business during the first half. The company has reinforced its approach to cost discipline, halting discretionary spending and freezing support roles while maintaining targeted investment priorities.
The company is deploying its competitive advantages to stabilise profitability. These include leveraging its proprietary customer data and brand equity to increase market share through aggressive promotion of short to medium haul international travel and domestic itineraries. Management highlighted its ability to secure preferential supplier content, pricing tiers, and capacity commitments, which translate directly into stronger unit economics. Artificial intelligence tools are lifting consultant efficiency and reducing the cost to serve while delivering more personalised customer experiences.
Flight Centre’s balance sheet remains strong, providing flexibility to navigate current volatility while maintaining investments in growth initiatives. The Iglu acquisition is set to accelerate cruise momentum, and management has demonstrated its proven ability to adapt to changing market dynamics. The disposal of interests in the Pedal Group is being treated as a below-the-line item for FY26, with the expected $5 million profit contribution moved accordingly.
Investors should monitor leisure trading momentum through May and June, when the impact of sustained volatility will become clearer. The strength or weakness of forward bookings will signal whether the disruption remains a tactical challenge or points to deeper demand destruction. Corporate business resilience will also bear watching, particularly if geopolitical tensions drive sustained airfare inflation or corporate travel budgets face pressure. This announcement is price sensitive and has been flagged as material by the ASX.
View the full ASX announcement (PDF)
About Flight Centre Travel Group Limited (ASX: FLT)
Flight Centre Travel Group Limited is a global travel agency group providing leisure and corporate travel retailing services including flight bookings, hotel accommodations, car rentals, and holiday packages. The company operates across Australia and New Zealand, The Americas, EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa), and Asia through multiple brand names including Flight Centre, Aunt Betty, Corporate Traveller, and FCM. It generates approximately equal revenue from the corporate and leisure travel segments.
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