Howard Hughes
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Unit revenue improvements driving DL's surge to emergence, profitability
Wednesday March 28, 2007
In touting its restructuring at yesterday's Investor Day in Atlanta, Delta Air Lines said it expects to be profitable in its first year following emergence from bankruptcy protection, that it has succeeded in delivering on the "three pillars" of its transformation plan and that it remains interested in selling certain assets, including regional subsidiary Comair.
The carrier now expects to emerge from Chapter 11 on April 30, with a stock relisting scheduled for early the following month. It is projecting pre-tax earnings of $816 million in 2007 compared to a pre-tax loss of $452 million last year. Pre-tax profit will rise to $1.5-$1.6 billion in 2008-09 and $1.9 billion in 2010, DL said in its presentation, which it also filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
For the current quarter it is forecasting consolidated passenger RASM of 10.52-10.56 cents, up 4% on the year-ago period. Mainline unit costs are projected to fall 7% to 9.95-9.99 cents, or 9% to 6.98-7.02 cents excluding fuel. Capacity will rise 1%-3%.
Unit revenue improvement was one of DL's pillars, dubbed "Closing the RASM Gap." In 2005 its length-of-haul adjusted passenger RASM of 8.64 cents was 86% of the industry average of 9.93 cents. Last year it rose to 93%, with DL's 10.18 cents comparing to the industry average of 11 cents. Last year's year-over-year improvement of 18% was the best among US majors, the company said, beating out US Airways' 14% and Southwest Airlines' 11%. Helping to drive improvement was a 13% plunge in domestic capacity, which far outpaced American Airlines' 3% and US's 1%. The aforementioned 4% PRASM improvement will compare to an industry average of 1.5%, DL said.
In addition to "Repairing the Balance Sheet," which it said was accomplished in part with a reduction in net debt to $7.6 billion from $17 billion, DL wanted to achieve "Best-in-Class Costs." Mainline unit cost excluding fuel has dropped from 8.99 cents in 2003 to an expected 6.60 cents in 2007.
Regarding Comair, CFO Ed Bastian said the company will "look at whether owning that business makes a lot of sense," according to press reports.
by Brian Straus
Wednesday March 28, 2007
In touting its restructuring at yesterday's Investor Day in Atlanta, Delta Air Lines said it expects to be profitable in its first year following emergence from bankruptcy protection, that it has succeeded in delivering on the "three pillars" of its transformation plan and that it remains interested in selling certain assets, including regional subsidiary Comair.
The carrier now expects to emerge from Chapter 11 on April 30, with a stock relisting scheduled for early the following month. It is projecting pre-tax earnings of $816 million in 2007 compared to a pre-tax loss of $452 million last year. Pre-tax profit will rise to $1.5-$1.6 billion in 2008-09 and $1.9 billion in 2010, DL said in its presentation, which it also filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
For the current quarter it is forecasting consolidated passenger RASM of 10.52-10.56 cents, up 4% on the year-ago period. Mainline unit costs are projected to fall 7% to 9.95-9.99 cents, or 9% to 6.98-7.02 cents excluding fuel. Capacity will rise 1%-3%.
Unit revenue improvement was one of DL's pillars, dubbed "Closing the RASM Gap." In 2005 its length-of-haul adjusted passenger RASM of 8.64 cents was 86% of the industry average of 9.93 cents. Last year it rose to 93%, with DL's 10.18 cents comparing to the industry average of 11 cents. Last year's year-over-year improvement of 18% was the best among US majors, the company said, beating out US Airways' 14% and Southwest Airlines' 11%. Helping to drive improvement was a 13% plunge in domestic capacity, which far outpaced American Airlines' 3% and US's 1%. The aforementioned 4% PRASM improvement will compare to an industry average of 1.5%, DL said.
In addition to "Repairing the Balance Sheet," which it said was accomplished in part with a reduction in net debt to $7.6 billion from $17 billion, DL wanted to achieve "Best-in-Class Costs." Mainline unit cost excluding fuel has dropped from 8.99 cents in 2003 to an expected 6.60 cents in 2007.
Regarding Comair, CFO Ed Bastian said the company will "look at whether owning that business makes a lot of sense," according to press reports.
by Brian Straus
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