Houston Chronicle

Airline sector’s recovery stalls as cases remain high

- By David Koenig

DALLAS — Several leading U.S. airlines warned Thursday that the rise in COVID-19 cases due to the delta variant is hurting their bookings and further delaying the travel industry’s recovery.

The summer got off to a strong start, with many planes full of vacationer­s eager to break out after being stuck at home for more than a year. After months of improving travel numbers, however, August was disappoint­ing.

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said Thursday that people are still traveling, but key segments — business and internatio­nal flyers — are still largely missing. He said the rise in COVID-19 cases won’t derail the travel recovery but will delay it by 90 to 120 days.

Delta said it still expects to post an adjusted pretax profit for the third quarter, but revenue will be toward the lower end of its previous forecast.

United Airlines said its revenue is weaker than previously expected, and it forecast a pretax loss in the third quarter that could extend into the fourth quarter if the virus outbreak continues. It is trimming flights to match the lower demand.

American Airlines said a slowdown that started in August has continued into September, and the airline further lowered its outlook for third-quarter revenue.

Southwest Airlines reported that leisure travel has weakened, with more cancellati­ons and softer bookings for September and October. Southwest said, however, booking patterns for the winter holidays look normal.

Airlines are watching COVID-19 numbers closely and finding hope in the latest figures showing the surge that started in July might have peaked. The seven-day average of cases is roughly flat compared with two weeks ago.

Airline executives say they believe bookings will pick up as soon as case counts go down.

“Things moved downward rather quickly, but they can, I think, move upward just as quickly,” Andrew Nocella, United’s chief marketing officer, said during an investor conference held by financials­ervices firm Cowen.

Air travel over the Labor Day weekend approached 2019 levels — on two days, the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion screened more than 2 million travelers.

By Wednesday, however, the number of people going through airport checkpoint­s dropped back to 1.4 million, down 28 percent from the comparable Wednesday in 2019.

United’s Nocella warned that travel is likely to slump in October, early November, and the period between Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas.

In a bid to reassure passengers worried about the virus, airlines have been pushing their employees to get vaccinated.

United is requiring the shots and says it will fire workers who don’t get vaccinated or merit an exemption on medical or religious grounds. A United executive said Wednesday that more than half of the previously unvaccinat­ed employees have received a shot since the airline announced the requiremen­t last month.

Delta employees on the company health plan face a $200 monthly surcharge starting in November if they aren’t vaccinated. On Thursday, the airline’s chief health officer, Dr. Henry Ting, said that nearly one-fifth of the 20,000 Delta employees who were unvaccinat­ed when the surcharge was announced have decided to get the shots.

 ?? Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press ?? Airlines are watching COVID-19 numbers closely and finding hope that the surge that started in July might have peaked.
Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press Airlines are watching COVID-19 numbers closely and finding hope that the surge that started in July might have peaked.

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