United Airlines financial hole grew deeper over the summer as a modest recovery in air travel slowed down, pushing the carrier to a loss of $1.84 billion in the typically strong third quarter.
The airline said Wednesday that revenue plummeted 78% from a year earlier. The loss was worse than analysts had expected.
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The results from United, and those issued a day earlier by Delta Air Lines, reinforced the damage that the pandemic is doing to a major industry. Seven months into the worst of the coronavirus impact in the U.S., air travel remains down 65% from a year ago. The decline in lucrative business travel is even deeper.
United executives believe investors are less interested in current losses and more interested in what the airline plans to do to improve its competitive position when travel recovers.
CEO Scott Kirby said the airline has “successfully executed our initial crisis strategy” and is ready to move on.
“Even though the negative impact of COVID-19 will persist in the near term, we are now focused on positioning the airline for a strong recovery that will allow United to bring our furloughed employees back to work and emerge as the global leader in aviation,” Kirby said in a statement. United declined to make officials available to discuss the results before a call with analysts on Thursday.
Chicago-based United began furloughing 13,000 workers on Oct. 1, and several thousand other employees took severance packages to leave voluntarily.
The airline has cut flights more aggressively than some of its closest competitors in a bid to align costs with dramatically lower ticket sales. And United is borrowing billions of dollars from the federal government and private lenders to outlast the pandemic. The airline ended September with $19.4 billion in liquidity.
United met a goal it set in July to reduce cash losses to $25 million a day, down from $40 million a day in the second quarter, and roughly in line with Delta, which reported a $5.4 billion quarterly loss on Tuesday.
At current revenue, United has enough cash to last nearly 21 months — longer than American Airlines but not as long as Southwest or Delta — according to calculations by Raymond James analysts.
United, Delta and American rely on business and international travelers for much of their revenue. Those high-fare customers, however, are expected to return more slowly than leisure travelers booking trips closer to home. The airline industry is pushing governments to test travelers for COVID-19 instead of closing borders or imposing long quarantine requirements on international travelers.
Airlines also are trying to lure passengers by requiring face masks, stepping up their cleaning of plane cabins, and citing industry claims that transmission of the new coronavirus on flights is rare. Some, like Delta and Southwest, leave middle seats open to put more space between passengers. United and American do not.
United's third-quarter loss compared with a year-ago profit of $1 billion. Excluding what the company considers unusual items, the loss was $8.16 per share, worse than the $7.53 per share loss that analysts expected, according to a FactSet survey.
Revenue plunged to $2.49 billion, roughly in line with analysts' forecast. Cargo was a rare bright spot, with revenue up 50%.
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David Koenig can be reached at www.twitter.com/airlinewriter