Oct 24 (Reuters) -
U.S. carriers Delta Air Lines and US Airways Group turned in higher
quarterly profits on Wednesday and indicated revenue trends looked to be
improving following a weaker September.
Delta's profit was a
penny shy of analysts' average estimates, excluding special items, while
US Airways topped estimates. Revenue at both carriers was softer in the
quarter than analysts expected.
But Delta said unit revenue - a
measure of pricing power and how full planes are - would likely rise 4
percent to 5 percent in October after a 3 percent increase in the third
quarter. US Airways said the "revenue environment looks strong."
Performance
in unit revenue weakened at many U.S. airlines toward the end of the
third quarter, which is a traditionally strong period that usually
benefits from some summer travel.
Given the September softness,
the reports are "very much in line" with expected results, said Bill
Swelbar, a research engineer at MIT's international center for air
transportation. "I continue to be impressed by how the companies manage
costs in a period of slow growth, which is a difficult thing to do."
Delta said it would undertake cost-cutting moves over the coming year to hold down non-fuel unit expenses.
"We
are now implementing a $1 billion program of initiatives which will
generate significant savings in the second half of 2013 and produce
structural changes to the way we do business at Delta," Chief Financial
Officer Paul Jacobson said in a memo to staff.
U.S. carriers have
merged, stopped flying unprofitable routes and raised ticket prices to
recover from the 2008-09 downturn. Carriers have also cut back flying to
match demand and created new revenue streams with baggage and food
fees, moves that have helped keep profits coming in the face of volatile
fuel prices.
Delta had net income of $1.05 billion, or $1.23 a
share, for the third quarter, compared with $549 million, or 65 cents a
share, a year earlier.
Results included special items, such as a
$440 million gain tied to fuel hedges that together added up to a $279
million gain. Excluding items, Delta's profit was 90 cents a share,
compared with 91 cents expected by analysts, according to Thomson
Reuters I/B/E/S.
Revenue at Delta rose 1 percent to $9.92 billion, just missing the consensus analyst view of $9.96 billion.
At
US Airways, which is in talks with AMR Corp's American Airlines
evaluating a potential merger, third-period net income was $245 million,
or $1.24 a share, compared with $76 million, or 41 cents a share, a
year earlier.
Excluding one-time items, its profit was 98 cents a
share, compared with 92 cents expected by analysts on average. US Air
said revenue rose 2.8 percent to $3.53 billion, compared with $3.55
billion expected by analysts.
Last week, Southwest Airlines said
it planned to control hiring over the next year in an aggressive move to
cut overhead costs by $100 million. Excluding items, Southwest's third-
quarter profit beat analysts' average forecast but was down from a year
earlier on flat revenue.
Delta's shares were down 1.2 percent,
or 14 cents, at $10.01 in morning trading, while US Airways' shares rose
about 4 percent, or 49 cents, to $12.58 in morning trading.
http://www.reuters.com
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