Not real well
US Airways Sees Third Quarter Loss
October 03, 2003 7:04:00 PM ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The chief executive of US Airways Group, the No. 7 U.S. airline, forecast a net loss for the company's third quarter on Friday, and said revenue was not improving at the rate the airline had hoped.
Earlier in the day, US Airways had estimated that its unit revenue grew 6 percent to 7 percent in September, which reinforced comments from Continental Airlines this week showing that revenue trends for the month improved.
The typically-strong third quarter should result in the industry's first operating profit since the end of 2000, Merrill Lynch analyst Michael Linenberg said on Friday.
But US Airways' results for the third quarter won't fare as well as its competitors', the airline's chief executive, David Siegel, said in a Friday telephone recording to employees.
``While other airlines are hinting that they may break even or show a profit for the quarter, that is not going to be the case for US Airways, I'm sorry to say,'' Siegel said.
Siegel said the airline's results for the quarter were sacked by increased competition from lower-cost carriers and by hurricane Isabel, which swept across the East Coast where US Airways' operations are focused, and prompted the airline to cancel more than 700 flights.
US Airways, based in Arlington, Virginia, also expects to show a loss for the quarter on a pretax basis, Siegel said. Merrill's Linenberg said the U.S. airline industry as a whole should show pretax losses for the quarter.
The air carrier, which emerged from bankruptcy on March 31, has made a broad effort to increase its use of smaller, cheaper regional jets on many routes.
But Siegel said challenges still remained for US Airways to hit targets for introducing regional jets into service.
US Airways filed an application this week to list its shares on Nasdaq, a process Siegel said could take four to six weeks.
© 2003 Reuters