From ATW online:
US carriers report first March quarter operating profit since 2000
Wednesday June 27, 2007
The US Bureau of Transportation Statistics reported that a group of 21 US passenger airlines, consisting of the seven largest network, low-cost and regional carriers based on operating revenue, reported a collective system operating profit margin of 2.7% for the 2007 first quarter, the group's first profitable first quarter since 2000 and its fourth consecutive following years of heavy losses.
The profit margin improved from a loss margin of 1.3% in the year-ago quarter. The seven regionals reported an operating profit margin of 6.3%, the network carriers 2.5% and the LCCs 2.3%. The network group's margin was up 5.8 points over a 3.3% loss margin in the year-ago quarter as the seven carriers reported a combined operating profit of $559 million, reversed from a $711 million loss in the 2006 first period.
The top operating profit margins were reported by regional carriers Atlantic Southeast Airlines (12.9%), Pinnacle Airlines (9%) and American Eagle Airlines (11.2%). Northwest Airlines (7.2%) reported the top margin among network carriers and Spirit Airlines (7%) led the LCCs. Only six of the 21 carriers reported loss margins: ATA Airlines, Mesa Airlines, Alaska Airlines, United Airlines, Frontier Airlines and JetBlue Airways.
The network and low-cost groups reported higher unit revenue in the quarter compared to the year-ago period, with network airlines registering the biggest gain at 0.4 cents per ASM. Regionals reported the highest unit revenue but the first-quarter result of 14.9 cents fell 0.5 cents from last year. Network carriers' unit revenue was 13.5 cents, followed by the LCCs at 9.6 cents.
Regionals reported the highest unit cost during the quarter at 14 cents per ASM, followed by network carriers at 13.1 cents and LCCs at 9.4 cents. Only the network group reported lower unit costs in the 2007 first quarter compared to the year-ago quarter, a decrease of 0.4 cents.
BTS also reported that US airlines carried 177.6 million scheduled domestic and international passengers in the quarter, a 1.6% increase over 174.8 million in the year-ago period, comprising 1.2% more domestic and 4.9% more international passengers.
by Aaron Karp
US carriers report first March quarter operating profit since 2000
Wednesday June 27, 2007
The US Bureau of Transportation Statistics reported that a group of 21 US passenger airlines, consisting of the seven largest network, low-cost and regional carriers based on operating revenue, reported a collective system operating profit margin of 2.7% for the 2007 first quarter, the group's first profitable first quarter since 2000 and its fourth consecutive following years of heavy losses.
The profit margin improved from a loss margin of 1.3% in the year-ago quarter. The seven regionals reported an operating profit margin of 6.3%, the network carriers 2.5% and the LCCs 2.3%. The network group's margin was up 5.8 points over a 3.3% loss margin in the year-ago quarter as the seven carriers reported a combined operating profit of $559 million, reversed from a $711 million loss in the 2006 first period.
The top operating profit margins were reported by regional carriers Atlantic Southeast Airlines (12.9%), Pinnacle Airlines (9%) and American Eagle Airlines (11.2%). Northwest Airlines (7.2%) reported the top margin among network carriers and Spirit Airlines (7%) led the LCCs. Only six of the 21 carriers reported loss margins: ATA Airlines, Mesa Airlines, Alaska Airlines, United Airlines, Frontier Airlines and JetBlue Airways.
The network and low-cost groups reported higher unit revenue in the quarter compared to the year-ago period, with network airlines registering the biggest gain at 0.4 cents per ASM. Regionals reported the highest unit revenue but the first-quarter result of 14.9 cents fell 0.5 cents from last year. Network carriers' unit revenue was 13.5 cents, followed by the LCCs at 9.6 cents.
Regionals reported the highest unit cost during the quarter at 14 cents per ASM, followed by network carriers at 13.1 cents and LCCs at 9.4 cents. Only the network group reported lower unit costs in the 2007 first quarter compared to the year-ago quarter, a decrease of 0.4 cents.
BTS also reported that US airlines carried 177.6 million scheduled domestic and international passengers in the quarter, a 1.6% increase over 174.8 million in the year-ago period, comprising 1.2% more domestic and 4.9% more international passengers.
by Aaron Karp