Southwest’s quarterly profit misses estimates, but airline says U.S. travel demand is stabilizing

Southwest’s quarterly profit misses estimates, but airline says U.S. travel demand is stabilizing


A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 taxis at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on May 16, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia.

Kevin Carter | Getty Images

Southwest Airlines on Wednesday posted second-quarter earnings and revenue that fell short of Wall Street’s estimates but said travel demand has stabilized, echoing other airlines in recent weeks.

The airline also announced a new $2 billion share buyback.

Here’s how Southwest performed in the second quarter compared with Wall Street expectations, according to consensus estimates from LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: 43 cents adjusted vs. 51 cents expected
  • Revenue: $7.24 billion vs. $7.3 billion expected

The carrier pulled its 2025 guidance in April, citing economic uncertainty in the U.S. Like other airlines, Southwest said it would cut flights during off-peak periods as carriers grappled with weaker domestic travel demand than expected at the start of the year. CEO Bob Jordan told CNBC last month that there has been more discounting this summer, which is generally the busiest travel period of the year.

Southwest expects its third-quarter unit revenue, a gauge of airlines’ pricing power, to range between a 2% drop to a 2% increase over the same July-through-September period of 2024.

Read more CNBC airline news

The airline has been overhauling its business model, getting rid of blanket policies like two free checked bags for all customers and moving from open seating to assigned seats and new boarding orders, which the carrier announced on Monday.

Southwest said sales of basic economy suffered on its website after it launched the restrictive new fares in May. It said they have since returned to “expected levels” but that it hurt its unit revenue in the second quarter by a half a point and would hurt unit revenue by about a point in the third quarter.

Southwest posted net income of $213 million, or 39 cents a share in the second quarter, down 42% over last year, on sales of $7.24 billion, 1.5% lower than a year earlier. Adjusting for one-time items, Southwest’s second-quarter earnings were $230 million, or 43 cents a share, down 38% from last year.

This is breaking news. Please refresh for updates.



Source

How Build-A-Bear went from a penny stock to a retail winner
Business

How Build-A-Bear went from a penny stock to a retail winner

Build-A-Bear Workshop wasn’t always a retail winner. The toy store, known for its interactive experience of building and accessorizing stuffed animals, has gone through a significant turnaround since CEO Sharon Price John took the helm of the company over a decade ago. “When I first came in 2013, that assessment of the brand was strong,” […]

Read More
Inside the dealmaking that pushed Trump to reclassify pot, expand access
Business

Inside the dealmaking that pushed Trump to reclassify pot, expand access

President Donald Trump’s move Thursday to sign an executive order easing federal restrictions on marijuana — and clearing the way for a Medicare pilot program covering CBD — caps a coordinated, yearlong push by the cannabis industry that combined traditional lobbying, sizable political donations, data-driven messaging and direct outreach to the president’s inner circle, industry […]

Read More
Shoppers are focusing on quality, not deals, in the final days before Christmas
Business

Shoppers are focusing on quality, not deals, in the final days before Christmas

While discounts drive purchasing in the early days of the holiday shopping season, consumers are shifting into more thoughtful, quality gifts in the back half of the season as total spending growth slows. U.S. consumers had spent $187.3 billion so far online between Nov. 1 and Dec. 12, up 6.1% from the same stretch last […]

Read More