IAG’s share price soars as BA owner returns €1.4bn to investors after doubling profits

Richard Alvin

ByRichard Alvin

February 28, 2025
IAG, the owner of British Airways, is returning €1.435 billion to its shareholders following a buoyant holiday trading period that saw its quarterly operating profit nearly double to €961 million.

IAG, the owner of British Airways, is returning €1.435 billion to its shareholders following a buoyant holiday trading period that saw its quarterly operating profit nearly double to €961 million.

The group – which also includes Iberia, Aer Lingus and Vueling – is the latest FTSE 100 airline to bounce back from pandemic-related turmoil, reporting record revenues and profitability.

From a low of just under £1 per share in mid-2022, IAG’s stock approached 367p this month. After dipping slightly, the share price rose over 3% in early trading on Friday, driven by news of a new €1 billion share buyback. This follows €350 million of recent repurchases and a total dividend of 9 euro cents per share.

Full-year operating profits climbed 22% to €4.28 billion on revenues of €32.1 billion, comfortably outpacing City expectations. Notably, IAG increased its profit margin from 11.9% to 13.8%—well above the industry’s usual performance threshold. British Airways alone, carrying 46 million of IAG’s 122 million annual passengers, posted a profit margin of 14.2%.

IAG’s traditionally lucrative business-travel market has yet to recover fully, but the company highlights robust consumer demand for leisure and “visiting friends and relatives” trips, especially on transatlantic routes. Despite incurring one-off costs such as a restructuring at Iberia and an aborted takeover of Air Europa, the group reduced its net debt from €9.2 billion to €7.5 billion, helped by a strong cash flow of €3.5 billion last year.

Chief executive Luis Gallego said that “strong customer demand continues,” fuelling expectations of further gains in 2025. While rival short-haul carriers like Ryanair and easyJet have struggled with weaker Christmas trading, IAG’s fortified position in long-haul markets appears to be paying off.

Richard Alvin

ByRichard Alvin

Richard Alvin, Group MD of the Capital Business Media group and Editor in Chief of Travelling For Business, regarded as one of the UK's travel magazines in the UK.