The Pak Banker

Air travel 'at a stall' amid resurgent virus, recovery over 2 years away: Delta CEO

- -AFP

Delta Air Lines warned on Tuesday it will be more than two years before the industry sees a sustainabl­e recovery from the "staggering" impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic, with demand largely tracking the curve of infections in different places.

"We're at a stall right now," Chief Executive Ed Bastian told Reuters, saying demand that built up over June for travel to places like Las Vegas, Florida or New York had suffered due to fresh cases and quarantine­s, while picking up to some mountain and internatio­nal destinatio­ns.

The Atlanta- based carrier has scaled back the flights it planned to add in August to 500 from 1,000. Shares were down 1.9% pre-market.

Delta posted a $2.8 billion adjusted net loss, or $4.43 per share, for the second quarter as passenger revenue plummeted 94% during a season that some analysts call the worst in aviation history.

Delta stuck to its target to halt a daily cash burn, which hit $100 million at the start of the pandemic, though Bastian warned it hinges on demand.

"There's a lot of risk because it's hard forecastin­g what's going to happen with the virus," he said.

The airline slowed its daily cash burn to about $ 27 million in June and sees a similar rate in July, with improvemen­ts as economies open and people feel more comfortabl­e traveling.

Delta had $15.7 billion in liquidity at the end of June. It has not decided whether to take a $4.6 billion secured loan under the CARES Act - available until Sept. 30 - as it eyes other options involving similar collateral, Bastian said.

It already received $5.4 billion to cover payroll through September under the U.S. government stimulus package.

Large U.S. airlines have warned of furloughs in October when those funds run out, but Bastian said he hoped to avoid furloughs after more than 17,000 employees opted for buyouts and thousands more for extended unpaid leaves.

Over 45,000 employees have taken varying short-term leaves. Delta may continue blocking middle seats beyond September thanks to demand for comfort, but warned it cannot make money filling only 60% of its planes.

"You can't raise prices high enough, particular­ly when your competitio­n isn't blocking middle seats and has a lot more supply out there," he said. Southwest Airlines (LUV.N) too is limiting seating capacity through September, but rivals American Airlines (AAL.O) and United Airlines (UAL.O) have added thousands of flights with all seats for sale on hopes of picking up leisure summer demand.

Delta, the first of the U. S. airlines to report quarterly results, is more geared toward business travel, which will be slower to recover, but Bastian said its SkyMiles loyalty data showed business customers traveling for personal reasons and willing to pay a premium.

"This is something that will take two to three years for us to walk through and we'll be very discipline­d as to how we walk it back up," he said.

Delta, which had been expanding aggressive­ly through internatio­nal partnershi­ps, wrote down $1.1 billion against its recent LATAM Airlines (LTM.SN) investment and $770 million against Grupo AeroMexico (AEROMEX.MX) after their Chapter 11 filings, and booked a $200 million charge against its stake in Virgin Atlantic, which is also restructur­ing. Delta flew 93% fewer passengers in the quarter, while its fuel expense was $372 million versus $2.3 billion a year ago.

Meanwhile, Creditors of lossmaking South African Airways (SAA) approved a rescue plan on Tuesday which requires at least 10 billion rand ($596 million) in new funding, throwing the ball into the government's court to come up with the cash to save the airline.

Administra­tor Siviwe Dongwana told a creditor meeting that the plan had been approved by 86% of voting interests.

"The practition­ers welcome the approval of the business rescue plan with an overwhelmi­ng majority of those who voted. It is an important step forward for the airline and provides much-needed certainty towards a restructur­ed SAA," Dongwana added in a statement.

The rescue plan envisages scaling back the state-owned airline's fleet and shedding jobs but requires the government to find at least 10 billion rand of new funds for it to work. It is not yet clear where that money will come from. Dongwana told the creditor meeting that the Department of Public Enterprise­s had told the administra­tors that the government would deliver a letter to them on Wednesday with a funding commitment.

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CHICAGO

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