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By Elizabeth Souder, Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Southwest Airlines Co. executives are talking to officials at both Chicago's Midway airport and Philadelphia's airport about getting more gate space.
Those talks yielded two more gates in Philadelphia this week, boosting the airline's presence to six gates from four, Chief Executive Gary Kelly said in a speech to analysts Thursday.
In Chicago, Kelly said he is considering bidding for gates that bankrupt ATA Holdings Corp. has put on the block. He said he's hired bankruptcy lawyers and advisors to consider ATA's assets.
"We've got some capacity already to continue to grow, but we have already expressed interest with the city of Chicago that we would like more gates," Kelly said. "Our primary interest is real estate at Chicago, but I wouldn't foreclose the possibility of bidding for other assets."
Last week, Kelly announced he will focus growth next year on Chicago, in light of ATA's bankruptcy and the fact that low-cost rival AirTran has bid to buy ATA's assets there to use as a second hub. AirTran is a unit of AirTran Holdings Inc.
Southwest officials said the airline will add 16 daily departures at Midway in the first quarter, boosting total daily departures to 161. Currently, Southwest uses 19 gates in Midway, and ATA uses 14 gates.
And even though AirTran has bid to buy that gate space, the deal is subject to approval by the city of Chicago. A spokeswoman for Midway said airport officials haven't made a final decision about gates, and are talking with other airlines about using those gates.
"If ATA ceases or reduces operations, the city may reclaim or reallocate" those gates, spokeswoman Annette Martinez said, adding that airport officials haven't set a date for making the decision.
AirTran's bid includes ATA assets at New York's LaGuardia and Washington's National airport, where gates are also under special restrictions and allocated by authorities.
Southwest's Kelly reiterated that focusing growth in Chicago doesn't preclude growth in the airline's newest destination: Philadelphia.
Southwest will receive 29 new airplanes in 2005, with fewer than 10 coming in the first quarter. Kelly said even if he devotes all of the first-quarter deliveries to Chicago growth, he could still grow in Philadelphia.
He said the two new gates in Philadelphia are in a separate terminal than the four original gates Southwest rented. Kelly said he's talking to airport officials about reconfiguring the gate space to make connections more convenient.
Further, Kelly said Chicago growth doesn't preclude opening new destinations next year with some of those airplane deliveries.
"We have airplanes available to open up one or two new cities, and we may do that," he said.
Southwest's Kelly said the airline will grow by around 10% next year. Even though the industry's overcapacity is keeping fares low, Kelly said Southwest can continue to grow profitably.
He said he expects to turn a profit in the fourth quarter, and for revenue to rise.
"Our fourth-quarter revenues should grow over last year - I'm just not sure they will keep pace with capacity growth," he said, adding: "although I would argue we are able to grow capacity profitably."
Southwest reported Thursday that demand in October grew faster than supply, with revenue passengers miles up 9.1% as capacity rose 8.4%. The airline's load factor rose 3 percentage points to 66.6%.
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Southwest Airlines Co. executives are talking to officials at both Chicago's Midway airport and Philadelphia's airport about getting more gate space.
Those talks yielded two more gates in Philadelphia this week, boosting the airline's presence to six gates from four, Chief Executive Gary Kelly said in a speech to analysts Thursday.
In Chicago, Kelly said he is considering bidding for gates that bankrupt ATA Holdings Corp. has put on the block. He said he's hired bankruptcy lawyers and advisors to consider ATA's assets.
"We've got some capacity already to continue to grow, but we have already expressed interest with the city of Chicago that we would like more gates," Kelly said. "Our primary interest is real estate at Chicago, but I wouldn't foreclose the possibility of bidding for other assets."
Last week, Kelly announced he will focus growth next year on Chicago, in light of ATA's bankruptcy and the fact that low-cost rival AirTran has bid to buy ATA's assets there to use as a second hub. AirTran is a unit of AirTran Holdings Inc.
Southwest officials said the airline will add 16 daily departures at Midway in the first quarter, boosting total daily departures to 161. Currently, Southwest uses 19 gates in Midway, and ATA uses 14 gates.
And even though AirTran has bid to buy that gate space, the deal is subject to approval by the city of Chicago. A spokeswoman for Midway said airport officials haven't made a final decision about gates, and are talking with other airlines about using those gates.
"If ATA ceases or reduces operations, the city may reclaim or reallocate" those gates, spokeswoman Annette Martinez said, adding that airport officials haven't set a date for making the decision.
AirTran's bid includes ATA assets at New York's LaGuardia and Washington's National airport, where gates are also under special restrictions and allocated by authorities.
Southwest's Kelly reiterated that focusing growth in Chicago doesn't preclude growth in the airline's newest destination: Philadelphia.
Southwest will receive 29 new airplanes in 2005, with fewer than 10 coming in the first quarter. Kelly said even if he devotes all of the first-quarter deliveries to Chicago growth, he could still grow in Philadelphia.
He said the two new gates in Philadelphia are in a separate terminal than the four original gates Southwest rented. Kelly said he's talking to airport officials about reconfiguring the gate space to make connections more convenient.
Further, Kelly said Chicago growth doesn't preclude opening new destinations next year with some of those airplane deliveries.
"We have airplanes available to open up one or two new cities, and we may do that," he said.
Southwest's Kelly said the airline will grow by around 10% next year. Even though the industry's overcapacity is keeping fares low, Kelly said Southwest can continue to grow profitably.
He said he expects to turn a profit in the fourth quarter, and for revenue to rise.
"Our fourth-quarter revenues should grow over last year - I'm just not sure they will keep pace with capacity growth," he said, adding: "although I would argue we are able to grow capacity profitably."
Southwest reported Thursday that demand in October grew faster than supply, with revenue passengers miles up 9.1% as capacity rose 8.4%. The airline's load factor rose 3 percentage points to 66.6%.