JBUCAPT,
Man alinve, you really do seem to rellish our misfortune. That is ok, I can understand that. The Song flying MAY BE our only profitable flying, since we really do not know. It can't be the savings grace, though.
Here is part of an article describing some of the losses or peper losses---looks like a lot is blamed on RJs:
"The bulk of the charges Delta reported in the quarter relate to reductions in the fair value estimates of two of its feeder carriers - Atlantic Southeast Airlines Inc. and Comair Inc. Delta said this resulted from increased fuel prices, low fares and costs associated with its turnaround plan.
On Christmas, Comair had to cancel all 1,100 of its flights because of a computer glitch and chief financial officer Michael Palumbo estimated Thursday that the incident cost the airline $20 million in lost revenue and added operating expenses.
In the quarter, Delta said its passenger unit revenue decreased 5.6 percent compared with a year ago as fares were 7.7 percent lower. Fuel expenses increased $385 million in the quarter.
Delta nearly fell into bankruptcy 2 1/2 months ago before winning deep concessions from pilots and fresh financing from creditors.
Analysts say it will take several more months to determine if Delta's transformation plan is working. If it does, Delta could turn a quarterly profit by the fall, some analysts say. Wild cards that remain: fuel prices, the economy and the company's recent fare overhaul.
The 32.5 percent pay cut pilots at the nation's third-largest airline accepted in November did not take effect until Dec. 1, so not much of those benefits were realized in the fourth-quarter 2004 results. And the financing agreements the airline secured around the same time called for some of the money to be provided in installments.
The most recent element of Delta's transformation plan - cutting its most expensive fares by up to half on routes nationwide - has met mixed reviews from analysts and industry observers since it was announced Jan. 5.
Another element of its transformation plan has been more job cuts and the shedding of its Dallas hub. In September, Delta said it would cut up to 7,000 jobs over 18 months. Delta said Thursday that 3,400 employees have opted to participate in voluntary work force reduction programs."
Bye Bye---General Lee