Side-stick-n,
Looks like we aren't the only ones sing'n the BLUES...
JetBlue Airways "fell on its own knife" in the fourth quarter as its internal capacity growth hurt its profitability, JP Morgan analyst Jamie Baker proclaimed last week. In early Dec., JetBlue revised its previously issued operating margin guidance downward to 13%-14%, citing "capacity additions resulting in lower average fares, particularly in our Western markets" (ATWOnline, Dec. 5). It did not identify the airline(s) responsible for the additions, but in a report released last week Baker noted that JetBlue boosted its own capacity 49% in the Oct.-Dec. period while the rest of the industry showed zero growth in competitive markets. "JetBlue was the sole growth culprit in the fourth quarter," he concluded. Now, with network rivals set to flood its markets with 12% additional capacity this quarter followed by a 16% increase in the March-June period, the carrier may be in for some turbulence in 2004. In Boston, which it began serving this month, American Airlines and others are planning 25% capacity growth, "great news for Boston passengers but not JetBlue shareholders," Baker wrote. JetBlue's own system capacity is set to grow 48% in Jan. and 38% in Feb., he noted.
Separately, JetBlue reported that load factor for Dec. fell 2.7 points to 82.2% as capacity outpaced traffic. RPMs rose 43.6% to 1.08 billion while ASMs climbed 48.2% to 1.31 billion. For the 12 months ended Dec. 31, RPMs were up 68.6% to 11.53 billion, ASMs grew 65.5% to 13.64 billion and load factor gained 1.5 points to 84.5%..--Perry Flint
So, which new cities will get Jetblue service from LGB? PHL next? It's great that you guys get to keep those slots and use them like a revolving door to new cities. What will be next? And give me a city out West that you think can support a Jetblue HUB and not compete with Southwest or AWA?
Bye Bye--General Lee
