SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 FORM 6-K Report of Foreign Private Issuer Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 For the month of May, 2004 RYANAIR HOLDINGS PLC (Translation of registrant's name into English) c/o Ryanair Ltd Corporate Head Office Dublin Airport County Dublin Ireland (Address of principal executive offices) Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F. Form 20-F..X.. Form 40-F..... Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Yes ..... No ..X.. If "Yes" is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b): 82- ________ AER RIANTA'S POOR RESULTS HIGHLIGHT THE FAILURE OF MONOPOLY AND THE NEED FOR COMPETITION AT DUBLIN AIRPORT This afternoon (Wednesday, 26th May 2004) Aer Rianta will release its (already leaked) financial results for 2003, and these again highlight the failure of the Aer Rianta airport monopoly and the urgent need for competition at Dublin Airport. These results which mark the last full year under the mismanagement of Chairman, Noel Hanlon, prove that the Aer Rianta airport monopoly is lagging behind its industry peer airports by failing to attract low fare traffic growth (like London Stansted airport), and by failing to control costs which has decimated its profitability. 1.Traffic Growth During the past 5 years (1999-2003) traffic at Dublin Airport has grown at a compound annual rate of just 6% compared to 26% for London Stansted, Ryanair's other main base. This woeful rate of growth at a time of unparalleled economic prosperity in Ireland lags way behind the traffic growth delivered at comparable airport peers such as London Stansted, London Luton (15%), Liverpool (31%) and Glasgow Prestwick (26%), all of whom have stimulated rapid low fare traffic growth with low fare carriers such as Ryanair and Easyjet. Annual Rate of Traffic Growth Aer Rianta Dublin London Stansted 1999 +9% 98/99 +35% 2000 +8% 99/00 +33% 2001 +4% 00/01 +23% 2002 +5% 01/02 +14% 2003 +5% 02/03 +19% Average 6% 25% The reason why the Aer Rianta monopoly has failed to deliver significant traffic growth at Dublin Airport is because it has spent the last five years increasing costs to the airlines and passengers (whilst other airports are reducing prices) and at the same time wasting hundreds of millions of pounds building unnecessary gold-plated facilities (like EUR80m on Pier D & EUR140m at Cork Airport). 2.Profitability These declining profits prove once again just how inefficient and mismanaged the Aer Rianta airport monopoly is. The Irish Aviation Regulator two years ago declared Aer Rianta to be "50% more inefficient than the best of its peer airports". During the 10 year period of the present Board's mismanagement; -actual charges paid by the airlines at Dublin have more than doubled, -carparking charges suffered by consumers have more than tripled and, -traffic at Dublin has doubled from 6.9m in 1994 to 15.9m in 2003, -yet annual profits have halved Airline users at Dublin Airport now pay the highest actual charges than at any midsized airport in Europe. These high charges have deterred quantum growth in low fare air traffic, as the Aer Rianta monopoly has repeatedly rejected Ryanair's offers to double traffic at Dublin Airport and has failed to attract other large low fare, high growth airlines such as Easyjet. During this decade despite charges to the airlines having doubled, the daily cost of carparking to passengers having trebled and profits at the airport monopoly have collapsed from EUR40m in 1994 to EUR20m in 2003. Aer Rianta's net profit margin during Noel Hanlon's Chairmanship has collapsed from 16% in 1994 when he joined the Board to just 4.5% in 2003. During the same period profits at the BAA operated airports rose by over 50% from GBP240m to GBP374m. Year Aer Rianta BAA Plc Profits EUR Margin Profits GBP Margin 1994 EUR37.5m 16% GBP240m 21% 2003 EUR20.0m 4% GBP374m 20% There is only one solution to this monopoly mess and that is competition. The Government has been promising legislation in competing terminals at Dublin Airport for over two years now. Every deadline made by Bertie Ahern's Government has been missed, meanwhile the Aer Rianta airport monopoly has been doubling costs to users, failing to control costs and as a result both profits and margins have collapsed. These shocking results prove it's time that this Government finally proceeded with a competing second terminal at Dublin and put an end forever to the inefficiency and incompetence of the Aer Rianta airport monopoly. Ends. Wednesday, 26th May 2004 For further information please contact: Paul Fitzsimmons Pauline McAlester Ryanair Murray Consultants Tel. 353-1-8121212 Tel. 353-1-4980300 SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, hereunto duly authorized. RYANAIR HOLDINGS PLC Date: 26 May, 2004 By:___/s/ Howard Millar____ H Millar Company Secretary & Finance Director