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Go-Ahead sees profits fall 24.5% following LSER contract breach

The transport operator revealed its half year results following the launch of a new strategy that aims to take operating profit to at least £150m

A Southeastern train(Image: PA)

The chief executive of transport operator Go-Ahead says he is encouraged by the group's performance, despite a drop in operating profit.

North East-based Go-Ahead saw operating profit fall 24.5% from £56.4m to £42.6m in the six months to January 1, 2022 and revenue fall 13% from £2.07bn to £1.79bn as Christian Schreyer said all of the business' divisions were operating in-line with, or above, expectations.

Earlier this month Go-Ahead launched a growth strategy, aiming to turn the page on a troubled period in which it was found to have concealed funding relating to the London & South Eastern Railway (LSER) contract run as part of its Govia joint venture. It was fined £23.5m and ordered to pay back £64m owed to the taxpayer.

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In an update to investors, the group said all outstanding matters - except for the fine - have now been settled with the Department for Transport.

Operating profits across Go-Ahead's º£½ÇÊÓÆµ rail business more than halved in the period, falling from £22.9m to £10.8m, and legal and advisory costs associated with the LSER issues were said to have reached £6.3m.

Despite what the Government called an "appalling breach of trust" over the LSER contract, Go-Ahead's Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) joint venture was awarded retained the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest rail contract - Thameslink, Southern and Great Northern rail services - in a decision made just a week later.

Go-Ahead said the management contract would not expose it to changes in passenger demand and posed no substantial cost risk to GTR, with a maximum annual fee of £31.7m available to the group. Mr Schreyer said the move "demonstrates clearly that we were able to reinstall trust with the Department for Transport".