The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

JetBlue shares drop after airline reports $120 million loss

- By David Koenig The Associated Press

JetBlue shares plunged 9 percent — among its worst one-day declines in a decade — after the airline reported a $120 million second-quarter loss on higher fuel expenses and gave a cautious outlook for the rest of 2018.

Executives of JetBlue, the nation’s sixth-biggest airline, said Tuesday they will respond by reducing planned growth and redirectin­g some West Coast flying to more profitable transconti­nental routes.

In the past few days, JetBlue has announced it would cut an undisclose­d number of jobs at its headquarte­rs in Long Island City, New York, and it raised fares — by $5 each way on most U.S. flights, and up to $50 each way on its premium transconti­nental service called Mint.

Earnings season is off to a turbulent start for U.S. airlines. Last week, United Airlines stock soared nearly 9 percent after it posted a surprising­ly large profit and gave a glowing forecast for the rest of 2018.

JetBlue stock went in the other direction, however, after the company reported Tuesday that it flipped to a loss for the April-June quarter after earning $207 million in the same period last year.

Revenue rose 5 percent, and JetBlue executives said demand for last-minute travel has been strong. Still, the average JetBlue passenger’s one-way fare dipped to $170.08, down $1.22 from a year earlier.

Meanwhile, JetBlue’s fuel spending spiked 51 percent, an increase of $166 million from a year earlier.

Excluding a write-down in the value of its Embraer E190 jets, which JetBlue plans to replace, the company said that it earned an adjusted profit of 38 cents per share, which was 2 cents better than the average estimate of seven analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research.

JetBlue said that with strong travel demand it expects a closely watched revenue per mile figure to be flat to up 3 percent in the third quarter.

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