July 16, 2009 10:08 AM
- Text
American Kicks Off Earnings Season
(MoneyWatch) It's earnings season, and if you're a fan of the airline industry, you'll probably want to pop some Prozac. Numbers are guaranteed to be really, really ugly. American kicked off the season yesterday with bad news, as expected.
That sound you hear is the crashing of passenger demand. I've talked about it here over the last few months as demand has continued to weaken, so this isn't a surprise. It's just painful to watch when you consider that this year's second quarter had both Easter and the beginning of the summer season.
American reported a net loss of $319 million in the quarter, excluding special items. That is just a bit worse than last year, but remember that fuel prices last year were far higher. In fact, American paid $3.19 a gallon in Q2 2008 and only $1.90 during Q2 this year. Costs went way down because of that, but so did revenue. Revenues were down a staggering $4.9 billion and unit revenues were down 16 percent.
Is there any good news? Well, American has over $3 billion in cash, and $3.7 billion of unencumbered assets that it can throw into the fire, if necessary, to raise more cash. So a relatively short term weakness in demand can probably be withstood by the airline. That's about as "good" as the news gets these days. Everyone is just holding on hoping for some improvement in demand.
That sound you hear is the crashing of passenger demand. I've talked about it here over the last few months as demand has continued to weaken, so this isn't a surprise. It's just painful to watch when you consider that this year's second quarter had both Easter and the beginning of the summer season.
American reported a net loss of $319 million in the quarter, excluding special items. That is just a bit worse than last year, but remember that fuel prices last year were far higher. In fact, American paid $3.19 a gallon in Q2 2008 and only $1.90 during Q2 this year. Costs went way down because of that, but so did revenue. Revenues were down a staggering $4.9 billion and unit revenues were down 16 percent.
Is there any good news? Well, American has over $3 billion in cash, and $3.7 billion of unencumbered assets that it can throw into the fire, if necessary, to raise more cash. So a relatively short term weakness in demand can probably be withstood by the airline. That's about as "good" as the news gets these days. Everyone is just holding on hoping for some improvement in demand.
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- Big banks, gov't officials strike $25B deal
- LinkedIn swings back to profit
- LinkedIn doubles revenue, beats growth estimates
- Kodak to stop making digital cameras, frames
- Market cap, schmarket cap, Apple still gets no respect
- Philip Morris Int'l income up nearly 8 percent
- Survey: Small biz plans big hires in 2012
- Freddie Mac: Mortgages inch higher but stay low
- Will the European debt crisis sink Obama's re-election?
- Banks in $25B deal to settle foreclosure abuses
- Joe Coffee: Scaling up without selling your soul
- Greek agreement accomplishes nothing
- 401K plans: New rules make costs clearer
- Are women leaders selling themselves short?
- Ask the Experts: New 401(k) rules
- Mortgage lenders strike a deal
- $25B foreclosure-abuse settlement reached
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Rep. Bachus faces insider-trading investigation
- Singapore DBS bank profit jumps 7.8 percent in 4Q
- Owner of Sierra mine surrenders to face charges
- Asia stocks slip as Greek bailout remains in limbo
on Facebook
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
- Tenn. father charged with murdering couple who"unfriended" daughter on Facebook
- Mo. teen gets life in prison for murder of 9-year-old girl
on CBS News






