General Lee
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WASHINGTON, June 13 (Reuters) - JetBlue Airways Corp. (JBLU.O: Quote, Profile , Research) is in the midst of a second "rigorous" review of its business strategy, but could sell more planes if necessary, the company's new chief executive said on Wednesday.
Dave Barger, who took over for David Neeleman a month ago, told a Merrill Lynch conference that he would have a clearer picture in about 60 days on the airline's direction.
JetBlue reduced its growth outlook last year. and Barger said cost discipline since has been good. "But there is still opportunity for improvement," he said.
The company stretched deliveries in 2006 and sold five Airbus A320s to moderate expansion. Barger did not rule out the sale of more aircraft in the future.
He also said all options are being considered to improve revenue in key markets, but that the carrier had no plans to introduce first-class seating.
Low-cost JetBlue is facing weaker demand, like other carriers, and is bracing for stiffer competition from established rivals this summer, including start-up Virgin America.
Barger said JetBlue can also look at new routes in the West and Midwest for its fleet of Embraer (EMBR3.SA: Quote, Profile , Research) 190s, a Brazilian-made 100-seat regional jet the carrier has been flying close to its East Coast base while working through operating problems.
JetBlue shares rose 14 cents to $10.33 on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Dave Barger, who took over for David Neeleman a month ago, told a Merrill Lynch conference that he would have a clearer picture in about 60 days on the airline's direction.
JetBlue reduced its growth outlook last year. and Barger said cost discipline since has been good. "But there is still opportunity for improvement," he said.
The company stretched deliveries in 2006 and sold five Airbus A320s to moderate expansion. Barger did not rule out the sale of more aircraft in the future.
He also said all options are being considered to improve revenue in key markets, but that the carrier had no plans to introduce first-class seating.
Low-cost JetBlue is facing weaker demand, like other carriers, and is bracing for stiffer competition from established rivals this summer, including start-up Virgin America.
Barger said JetBlue can also look at new routes in the West and Midwest for its fleet of Embraer (EMBR3.SA: Quote, Profile , Research) 190s, a Brazilian-made 100-seat regional jet the carrier has been flying close to its East Coast base while working through operating problems.
JetBlue shares rose 14 cents to $10.33 on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Bye Bye--General Lee