FRANKFURT: Leading German airline, Lufthansa, reported on Wednesday a net profit of 1.1 billion euros ($1.5 billion) in 2010, as it bounced back from a net loss of 34 million euros in 2009.

The group recorded an operating profit of 876 million euros, more than six times the 2009 figure of 130 million euros, on sales that climbed 22.4 percent to 27.3 billion euros, a statement said.

Lufthansa, which also owns the carriers Swiss, Austrian Airlines and BMI, said it benefitted last year from an exceptional tax gain worth around 400 million euros.

That caught analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires off guard, as they had forecast a net profit of around 600 million euros.

"On the basis of this gratifying result," Lufthansa directors will propose a dividend of 0.60 euros per share, the statement said.

Lufthansa did not pay a dividend in 2009 owing to its net loss.

"The results are good and even better than expected," said Juergen Pieper, an analyst at Bankhaus Metzler who had expected an operating profit of around 850 million euros and a dividend of 0.25 euros.

Full details of the group's results are to be published on March 17.

Shares in the German airline showed a strong gain of 3.32 percent to 15.11 euros in afternoon trading on the Frankfurt stock exchange while the DAX index on which they are listed was 0.28 percent higher overall.

Last year, the Lufthansa group carried 90 million passengers, a gain of 17 percent from 2009.

This year could be tougher however, because high oil prices will cut airline industry profits by nearly half despite the growth in air travel with the recovery, the International Air Transport Association said on March 2.

In a revised profit forecast, IATA said it was downgrading its airline industry profit outlook for 2011 to $8.6 billion from the $9.1 billion it estimated in December.

"The biggest shift in our forecast is the price of oil," IATA director general Giovanni Bisignani said.

"Profits will be cut in half compared to last year and margins are a pathetic 1.4 percent," he added.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2011

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