The Denver Post

Southwest, Jetblue: Q2 revenue will pass expectatio­ns

- By Niraj Chokshi

The travel rebound is shaping up to be even stronger than airlines had expected, helping to make up for rising fuel prices.

Southwest Airlines and Jetblue Airways said Thursday that their revenues in the second quarter were on track to be higher than the companies had projected.

The announceme­nts are the latest sign that people increasing­ly are planning leisure and business trips despite an increase in coronaviru­s cases across the country. Many travelers also seem unbothered by high prices for tickets, hotel rooms and rental cars. Flights booked within the United States for this weekend cost an average of $394, a 28% increase from the same weekend in 2019, according to Hopper, a travel booking app.

Southwest said in a securities filing that it expects revenues from April through June to increase from 12% to 15% from the same period in 2019, up from a previous projection of an 8%-12% increase.

And although fuel prices are expected to be 5%-11% higher than previously expected, higher revenue will “more than offset” that rise in costs, the airline said. Based on current trends, Southwest said it “expects solid profits and operating margins” for the second quarter and the rest of the year.

Jetblue similarly said business was improving and that it was on track to collect record revenue this summer. Ticket bookings are exceeding the airline’s expectatio­ns, with revenue for the current quarter expected to be “at or above” the high end of its previous estimate. Revenue per seat per mile flown is expected to be more than 20% higher than in the second quarter of 2019, the airline said.

United Airlines issued a similar update last week. The company said revenue per seat per mile is expected to be up 23% to 25% in the second quarter, compared with the same period in 2019. United previously forecast a 17% rise.

That upgraded forecast came one month after United’s CEO, Scott Kirby, described demand for flights as “the strongest it’s been in my 30 years in the industry.”

In the first half of May, consumers spent an estimated $4 billion for domestic flights, a 5% increase over the second half of April, according to a recent analysis by the Adobe Digital Economy Index, which tracks online sales from six of the top 10 U.S. airlines. Bookings were up 2% from the last 15 days in April and the first 15 days in May. Sales and spending were up in May, compared with a similar period in 2019, the analysis found.

Delta Air Lines on Thursday said it expected to fly 2.5 million passengers during Memorial Day weekend, a 25% increase from the same weekend last year but still below the 2.8 million people flown over the same weekend in 2019. The company also said it would trim flights this summer to prevent flight delays and cancellati­ons that bedeviled airlines last year.

Bad weather, air traffic control disruption­s, understaff­ed vendors and coronaviru­s quarantine­s have resulted “in an operation that isn’t consistent­ly up to the standards Delta has set,” Allison Ausband, the airline’s chief customer experience officer, said in a statement.

Delta plans to cut about 100 daily flights from July through the first week of August, representi­ng a 2% reduction in its schedule.

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