American Airlines is reporting a third-quarter profit of $169 million after collecting nearly $1 billion in federal pandemic aid, and it expects big crowds and more flights during the upcoming holidays.
The airline felt the late-summer impact of the highly contagious delta variant of COVID-19, which caused a slowdown in bookings and a rise in cancellations across the industry.
“While the rise of the COVID-19 delta variant delayed some of our revenue recovery, it has not stopped our progress,” said Chairman and CEO Doug Parker.
American said Thursday that it expects fourth-quarter revenue to be down 20% compared with the same quarter in pre-pandemic 2019.
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The Fort Worth-based airline said passenger-carrying capacity in the fourth quarter will be only 11% to 13% below the third quarter of 2019.
American plans to operate more than 6,000 flights a day during peak days in the fourth quarter. That compares with an average of just more than 5,600 flights a day during the third quarter, which included most of the summer vacation season.
Parker said that steps to pare its fleet of planes and reduce costs — thousands of workers quit last year — have left American in good position “as the recovery takes hold.”
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American’s profit of $169 million was possible because of $992 million in federal pandemic relief. Without taxpayer help, and other special items, American would have lost $641 million, or 99 cents per share.
Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected American to lose $1.04 per share.
Revenue was $8.97 billion. That was slightly better than analysts’ mean forecast of $8.92 billion, but it was down 25% from the same quarter in 2019, a sign of how far airlines still have to go to fully recover from the pandemic.
Shares of American Airlines Group Inc. rose 1% in early trading before Thursday’s session.