Judging by the $1,000,000,000 quarterly loss I would say nothing is making money in the high fuel environment. When you are losing nearly a half a million dollars an hour you have problems that parking some RJs wont fix.
You obviously didn't read the article about the loss. It was all a paper loss, looking at the value of the combined company with our decreased stock price due to high fuel. We actually had a $137 million operating profit, and our fuel hedging actually saved us over $313 million. Here is part of the article written by Reuters:
DELTA RESULTS
Delta, which has agreed to buy Northwest Airlines Corp, reported a quarterly net loss of $1 billion, or $2.64 per share. Excluding special charges, however, Delta said it
earned $137 million, or 35 cents per share.
Delta, which said the special charges were mainly for the
impairment of goodwill, emerged from bankruptcy at the end of April 2007, so many year-earlier figures were unavailable.
Revenue rose about 10 percent to $5.5 billion. Delta
ended the quarter with $4.3 billion in unrestricted liquidity, including $1 billion available under its revolving credit facility.
The airline said it expects capacity for the second half of 2008 to be down 4 percent compared with 2007, with its domestic capacity down 13 percent and international capacity
up 14 percent.
During the quarter, Delta hedged 49 percent of its fuel consumption and realized
$313 million in gains.
Delta said its merger is likely to close in the fourth quarter and it has reached a pre-merger joint bargaining agreement between the Delta and Northwest pilots.
The company upped its forecast for merger-related synergies to $2 billion from $1 billion by 2012. Delta said the savings and revenue will come mainly from combining the two carriers' networks.
I hope that makes you feel better......(how's that crow taste)
Bye Bye--General Lee