FLB717,
That is correct---and was stated by good ole Fred Reid, our President, in the ATL roadshow two weeks ago. You have to rememeber that Song uses a lot of other parts from mainline Delta to help with its efficiencies--like Delta Technology and other subsidiaries. The only expensive part is the pilots--and it looks like that won't change much. The Delta mainline CASM was better than NW, and at least 1 full point better than AA and UAL. The Song employees are the same as most LCC's in terms of wages, except the pilots. With 199 seats on the 757s, is there some way you couldn't see a 7.0? Song uses Delta's fuel hedging and other programs. And, as we all know, Song will get bigger and help Delta.
Hugh,
I used that "Thong " joke on here a while back-----due to the fact that we fly a lot to south Florida.
Ty,
Maybe you don't read the press a lot but the trends have shown that this summer was a good one for most airlines. Here you go:
Reuters
U.S. airlines monthly data shows encouraging signs
Thursday August 21, 5:18 pm ET
CHICAGO, Aug 21 (Reuters) - Large U.S. airlines in July had some of the most encouraging signs on revenue in months, although the typically slower fall travel season still casts uncertainty over the industry, analysts said.
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"All else equal, July data represents the first encouraging revenue performance since last December and presumably this time around will not be followed by a war," J.P. Morgan analyst Jamie Baker said in a note released on Wednesday.
The July figures represent the first instance of domestic fares rising since March 2001 and the results are likely to drive modest positive estimate revisions, despite last week's blackout and softening August domestic traffic, Baker said.
"Make no mistake -- these are strong results and even we are impressed," Baker said, adding that domestic traffic appeared to start dipping in late July year-over-year from flattish trends.
The American Stock Exchange airline index (AMEX:^XAL - News) rose about 2.3 percent on Thursday. The index is up about 88 percent since the end of March when shares were hammered by the Iraq war.
The Air Transport Association, an industry trade group, told analysts that unit revenue for U.S. airlines rose 8.1 percent systemwide in July from a year earlier. Unit revenue is a key industry measure of the money an airline generates by flying one seat one mile.
Domestic unit revenue rose 10.2 percent in July from a year earlier, continuing a sequential improvement in year-over-year monthly figures that started in May, analysts said. Latin America flying was next, then trans-Atlantic and Pacific.
Analysts said they would watch closely to see if airlines restore too much capacity before the system can absorb it and how airlines handle the return of government security fees in October that were suspended in June because of the Iraq war.
Airlines raised most fares by $10 per round-trip when the security fee of about the same amount was suspended, which helped support domestic yield recovery, Credit Suisse First Boston analyst Jim Higgins said in a note Wednesday.
Labor cost cuts at large airlines and a rebound in the U.S. economy should support airline stocks, Deutsche Bank Securities analyst Susan Donofrio said in a note. Donofrio has said most of what could go wrong in the industry may already have.
"(Airline share) prices look right, but the timing may be early," Blaylock & Partners analyst Ray Neidl said in a note. "The industry is heading into the slower fall season and September, post Labor Day, remains uncertain."
Uncertainty is clear, but we all know that the Fall is tough. For the Summer though, our yeilds were up, and we even had an operational profit for June. I am sure we will see the same for July and probably AUG. Now, I am not saying that the Sept-OCT time range will be easy for any of us, especially since it is always slower than Summer with pax going back to school etc. But, after the Fall, things will get better. You are correct that the fares have been lowered on those flights, but they have still been full and we already drove Jetblue out of the LA--ATL market (ok, we got them to ditch 2 out of the 3 flights). And, I know all about Ryan and your deal with them---I was only playing with AF Citrus' words. In reality, you are not flying those routes, and we are not flying the DCI routes.
Bye Bye--General Lee
