A surge in business passengers helped Sir Richard Branson's airline Virgin Atlantic to increase profits in 2007/08.
Profits have also soared in the first part of 2008/09, with Virgin partly attributing the increase to passengers switching from British Airways to avoid the initial problems at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
Virgin reported that its pre-tax profits for the year to February 2008 had risen £6m to £34.8m. Excluding exceptional items, the 2007/08 pre-tax profit rose 38% to £60.9m.
Virgin said its business-class passenger numbers rose 22% in 2007/08 and group sales, including tour operator Virgin Holidays, rose 9.1% to nearly £2.37 billion. The total number of passengers carried during the year increased by 7.6% to 5.7 million.
In the period March-May 2008, pre-tax profits rose to £23.5m, with sales up 16% to £645.3m. Virgin said it had 'gained passengers from British Airways' because of the problems that hit the new Terminal 5 at Heathrow.
The terminal had a shambolic opening in March this year, with flights cancelled, luggage going astray and huge queues.