Thomas Cook says Tunisia, Greece and forex to dent profit

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Travel firm Thomas Cook has warned that cancelations of holidays to Tunisia after a beach gun attack, concerns regarding Greece's potential exit from the euro and a currency hit would knock 64 million pounds ($100 million) off this year's profit.

Shares in the London-listed group, down 13 percent since June 26 when a gunman killed 38 mainly British holidaymakers in a Tunisian beach massacre claimed by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants, recovered from early losses to be marginally up by mid-morning.

Thomas Cook said the impact on fourth quarter bookings of the events in Tunisia and Greece would reduce 2014-15 operating profit by about 25 million pounds.

Foreign exchange translation would slice another 39 million pounds off operating profit, up from previous guidance of 25 million, due to further depreciation of the euro and Swedish krona against sterling.

However, the group said it remained confident of full year profit growth on a constant currency basis.

Thomas Cook CEO Peter Fankhauser flew to Tunisia on July 27 to meet Prime Minister Habib Essid and seek reassurance over how customer safety can be ensured.

"Tunisia going forward is going to be a popular holiday destination again," he told reporters. "I'm convinced that they will recover but we are of course heavily relying on the government advice."

For Thomas Cook and TUI, Europe's two biggest holiday firms, North Africa accounts for about 10 percent of customers, a third of them in Tunisia.

Thomas Cook posted an operating profit of 3 million pounds for the three months ended June 30, its fiscal third quarter, reversing a 50 million loss a year earlier.

Revenue rose 0.2 percent to 1.95 billion pounds.

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