Delta forecasts a quarterly profit as travelers keep flying despite higher fares, helping offset surging fuel costs

Delta forecasts a quarterly profit as travelers keep flying despite higher fares, helping offset surging fuel costs


A Delta Airlines Airbus A-350 aircraft, flight number DL40 bound for Los Angeles takes off from Kingsford Smith International Airport on July 26, 2021 in Sydney, Australia.

James D. Morgan | Getty Images

Delta Air Lines expects to return to a profit this quarter thanks to a jump in bookings — and fares — that are helping offset soaring fuel costs.

Shares were up more than 6% in premarket trading after the airline reported results. Rivals like American Airlines and United Airlines, which report next week, also rose.

The airline said Wednesday it expects unit revenues to rise double digits during the second quarter compared with 2019 and that sales overall will be recovered to as much as 97% of sales generated three years ago before Covid devastated travel demand.

Delta is also ramping up its schedule as peak travel season approaches and plans to fly 84% of its 2019 capacity levels this quarter, the Atlanta-based airline said in its first-quarter earnings release.

Airlines are facing higher fuel prices and other costs associated with ramping back up. Domestic U.S. airfare rose 20% last month compared with 2019, according to Adobe data, a sign that passengers are willing to pay more to travel after two years of pandemic.

Delta expects its costs excluding fuel to rise 17% in the second quarter as it increases flying and continues to hire to meet demand.

Here’s how Delta performed in the first quarter compared with what analysts expected, according to average estimates compiled by Refinitiv:

  • Adjusted loss per share: $1.23 versus $1.27 expected.
  • Revenue: $9.35 billion versus $8.92 billion expected.

The carrier reported a net loss of $940 million in the first three months of the year on revenue of $9.35 billion, above the $8.92 billion in sales that analysts polled by Refinitiv expected. Sales were off 11% from 2019 levels.

Carriers have been comparing results against 2019 to show their recovery versus pre-pandemic performance.

Delta’s fuel bill rose 6% from 2019 to $2.09 billion, even though its capacity was down 17%. Jet-fuel prices have more than doubled from last year and are up more than 50% since the start of the year, according to Platts.

“As our brand preference and demand momentum grow, we are successfully recapturing higher fuel prices, driving our outlook for a 12 to 14 percent adjusted operating margin and strong free cash flow in the June quarter,” CEO Ed Bastian said in a news release.

In January, Delta forecast a first-quarter loss as new Covid cases were peaking. Adjusting for one-time items, Delta posted a loss per share of $1.23 for the period, slightly better than the adjusted loss of $1.27 analysts expected.

The airline said other areas of its business also improved. It generated $1.2 billion from its American Express credit card partnership, up 25% from the same quarter of 2019 while spending rose 35% compared with three years ago. First-quarter revenue from its refinery was $1.2 billion, compared with $48 million three years earlier.

Delta ended the quarter with $12.8 billion in liquidity.

Delta executives will hold a call at 10 a.m. ET to discuss the results with analysts and media.



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