Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

American and United airlines could follow Delta seat cuts

High dollar drives reductions in overseas flights

- By Michael Sasso Bloomberg News

ATLANTA — Delta Air Lines’ move to cut seats on internatio­nal routes later this year may herald similar moves by American Airlines and United, helping the U.S. carriers pare costs and maintain pricing power.

The reduction announced Wednesday amounts to 3 percent of overseas capacity for Delta’s winter schedule. Delta is paring service from Japan and to Brazil, Africa, India and the Middle East. It’s also suspending flights to Moscow, meaning no U.S. passenger carrier will fly there during that period.

Delta’s pullback, disclosed along with firstquart­er earnings, focuses on markets that are facing a strong dollar and regions most affected by the decline in oil prices. Lucrative, long-haul foreign flights have been a focus for American, United and Delta in recent years, and shrinking the number of available seats lets them match demand with supply, supporting higher fares.

“The cuts are deeper than we had anticipate­d and the announceme­nt a little earlier,” said Savanthi Syth, a Raymond James Financial analyst. “This is what we would expect to see with capacity discipline. We would expect adjustment­s to internatio­nal capacity by the other legacy carriers” in the fall and winter months.

United Continenta­l Holdings hasn’t announced any changes to its winter internatio­nal capacity, spokeswoma­n Megan McCarthy said Wednesday. American Airlines Group disclosed in a regulatory filing last week that it trimmed internatio­nal growth plans to 1 percent this year from a prior estimate of 1.5 percent.

Total capacity will be up 2 percent this year compared with previous plans to grow as much as 3 percent.

American declined to provide additional informatio­n on capacity plans ahead of its earnings results on April 24, said Casey Norton, a spokesman.

Delta’s capacity shift “is likely to be greeted enthusiast­ically (including by us) and will likely be joined by similar efforts at competing carriers as earnings season moves on,” said Jamie Baker, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase, in a note. United and American will report results next week.

Delta gets about 30 percent of its revenue from internatio­nal sales and is feeling the pinch from the strength of the U.S. currency, which neared a 12year high against the euro earlier this week.

Delta’s seating capacity cuts follow expansion in Brazil in recent years. In Asia, Delta operates a hub at Tokyo’s Narita Internatio­nal Airport, where it has been cutting back while serving more Asian destinatio­ns from Seattle and other U.S. airports.

Airlines can reduce the number of available seats by flying routes less frequently, dropping service or using smaller aircraft.

To reduce capacity on Japan routes, Delta said it’s mostly switching out of Boeing 747 jumbo jets.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY ?? Delta is suspending flights to Moscow and paring capacity to Brazil, India and Africa.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY Delta is suspending flights to Moscow and paring capacity to Brazil, India and Africa.

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