Reuters
Delta Air to cut Florida flights, JetBlue shares up
Friday February 24, 7:23 pm ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bankrupt Delta Air Lines (Other OTC:DALRQ.PK - News) plans to slash flights on many routes where its Song unit competes with JetBlue Airways Corp. (NasdaqNM:JBLU - News), news that boosted JetBlue shares by over 6 percent on Friday.
The reduced competition on routes between New York City and Florida is likely to mean higher fares for summer travel and higher revenue for JetBlue, which recently posted its first quarterly loss since 2002.
Delta said the cuts were capacity adjustments to seasonal demand changes and not permanent. "The schedule changes simply reflect a seasonal pull down in capacity for May, which is one of the lowest demand periods to Florida," said Delta spokesman John Kennedy.
JetBlue has made little secret of its struggle to raise ticket prices amid stiff competition from Song and from Continental Airlines Inc. (NYSE:CAL - News), which has also added seats between the New York area and Florida.
The Delta capacity cuts, effective this summer, are of about 13 flights a day, or 25 percent, according to brokerage JP Morgan, which raised its rating on JetBlue shares to "neutral" from "underweight."
JetBlue, which has forecasted a loss for 2006, said the move would give it a boost.
"It's always good to see some rationality taking place," said David Ulmer, vice president of route and schedule planning. "This is certainly less capacity than we would have been assuming, though about what we hoped for."
In addition to the Florida reductions, Delta is slightly reducing flights to Los Angeles and Seattle, he said.
Delta's Kennedy said the adjustments in those two markets were partly due to the airline integrating Song into its network and adding first-class seats to its flights.
The No.3 U.S. carrier, which filed for bankruptcy protection in September, announced the following month that it planned to fold Song in May, about three years after it began flying. But it had kept rivals guessing about what that would mean for capacity.
Ulmer said he agreed with JP Morgan analyst Jamie Baker that the Delta change could mean more revenue than forecast starting in May and a full-year profit instead of a loss for JetBlue.
JetBlue shares closed up 74 cents, or 6.7 percent, at $11.82 -- a three-week high -- on Nasdaq.
Delta Air to cut Florida flights, JetBlue shares up
Friday February 24, 7:23 pm ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bankrupt Delta Air Lines (Other OTC:DALRQ.PK - News) plans to slash flights on many routes where its Song unit competes with JetBlue Airways Corp. (NasdaqNM:JBLU - News), news that boosted JetBlue shares by over 6 percent on Friday.
The reduced competition on routes between New York City and Florida is likely to mean higher fares for summer travel and higher revenue for JetBlue, which recently posted its first quarterly loss since 2002.
Delta said the cuts were capacity adjustments to seasonal demand changes and not permanent. "The schedule changes simply reflect a seasonal pull down in capacity for May, which is one of the lowest demand periods to Florida," said Delta spokesman John Kennedy.
JetBlue has made little secret of its struggle to raise ticket prices amid stiff competition from Song and from Continental Airlines Inc. (NYSE:CAL - News), which has also added seats between the New York area and Florida.
The Delta capacity cuts, effective this summer, are of about 13 flights a day, or 25 percent, according to brokerage JP Morgan, which raised its rating on JetBlue shares to "neutral" from "underweight."
JetBlue, which has forecasted a loss for 2006, said the move would give it a boost.
"It's always good to see some rationality taking place," said David Ulmer, vice president of route and schedule planning. "This is certainly less capacity than we would have been assuming, though about what we hoped for."
In addition to the Florida reductions, Delta is slightly reducing flights to Los Angeles and Seattle, he said.
Delta's Kennedy said the adjustments in those two markets were partly due to the airline integrating Song into its network and adding first-class seats to its flights.
The No.3 U.S. carrier, which filed for bankruptcy protection in September, announced the following month that it planned to fold Song in May, about three years after it began flying. But it had kept rivals guessing about what that would mean for capacity.
Ulmer said he agreed with JP Morgan analyst Jamie Baker that the Delta change could mean more revenue than forecast starting in May and a full-year profit instead of a loss for JetBlue.
JetBlue shares closed up 74 cents, or 6.7 percent, at $11.82 -- a three-week high -- on Nasdaq.