Wed | May 27, 2026

Big airlines reap bumper summer

Published:Wednesday | October 26, 2022 | 12:07 AM
American Airlines aircraft wait at gates at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, on June 7, 2021.
American Airlines aircraft wait at gates at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, on June 7, 2021.

The three biggest United States airlines enjoyed a boffo summer, reaping a combined profit of more than US$2 billion as Americans jammed on to planes despite fares that were sharply higher than a year ago.

American Airlines said that it earned US$483 million on record-breaking revenue that more than offset higher fuel costs in the third quarter. American predicted that profit will continue to exceed Wall Street expectations during the holiday-packed remainder of 2022.

The results from American, however, weren’t quite as grand as figures from its more prosperous rivals. United Airlines reported a US$942 million profit, and Delta Air Lines posted third-quarter earnings of US$695 million.

Clearly, many people are eager to travel after most were grounded during the early part of the pandemic. Executives at all three big US airlines said they see no indication that consumer concerns about inflation and the economy are hurting ticket sales.

“American’s third-quarter results, including our record revenue performance, are significant considering the macroeconomic uncertainty facing so many people,” CEO Robert Isom said on a call with analysts and reporters. “Demand remains strong.”

American, which is based in Fort Worth, Texas, predicted that fourth-quarter profit will be between 50 cents and 70 cents per share, which would beat Wall Street’s forecast of 19 cents per share.

US air travel has roared back from pandemic lows in early 2020. The Transportation Security Administration screened nearly 2.5 million travellers on a single day on a Sunday in October, the busiest day at the nation’s airports since February 2020.

Travel is booming despite a 43 per cent leap in airfares in the past year, according to government figures.

One reason fares are high is that the number of flights has not returned to pre-pandemic levels, leaving consumers vying for fewer seats. American, for example, did nearly 10 per cent less flying in the third quarter than in the same period of 2019.

American said it plans to run at 95 per cent to 100 per cent of 2019 levels next year. That is in line with Delta, which expects to restore its full schedule by next summer. United recently announced it will expand European flying next summer.

Isom said American could add more flights next year but will take a cautious approach. American, Delta and others cancelled flights earlier this year when they didn’t have enough staff, particularly pilots.

“We are going to make sure that we don’t outpace what we have, either in terms of aircraft deliveries if that’s the constraint, or if it’s pilots at a regional level or our ability to train pilots” at American, he said.

For the third quarter, American said its adjusted profit, which excludes certain items, was 69 cents per share, compared with a forecast of 54 cents per share by analysts surveyed by FactSet.

Revenue rose to US$13.46 billion, slightly higher than the US$13.36 billion predicted by analysts. American, which has a major hub operation in Miami and operates many flights to the Caribbean, said it lost about US$40 million in revenue because of hurricanes Fiona and Ian in September.

Also last Thursday, the parent of Alaska Airlines reported a US$40 million third-quarter profit on record revenue of US$2.8 billion. The Seattle-based airline said, however, that non-fuel costs in the fourth quarter will be higher than expected because of three new contracts with union labour groups including pilots.

AP