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Airline Stock Roundup: LUV's Delta Variant-Led Warning, CPA's July Traffic & More

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In the past week, Southwest Airlines’ (LUV - Free Report) management stated that it will be difficult for the company to be profitable in the September quarter as bookings in recent times are being affected by the spread of the Delta variant of the coronavirus. The current stance is therefore in stark contrast to the commentary made last month, which suggested that the company expects to be profitable in the third and the fourth quarter of 2021.

The July traffic at the Latin American carriers Azul (AZUL - Free Report) and Copa Holdings (CPA - Free Report) declined from the respective July 2019 actuals, reflecting that air-travel demand continues to lag the pre-coronavirus levels despite the recent uptick in air-travel demand.

Delta Air Lines (DAL - Free Report) also grabbed headlines in the past week by announcing that it intends to resume flying to London from Seattle and Detroit this October onward. The move is part of the Atlanta, GA-based carrier’s efforts to rebuild its international network.

Recap of the Past Week’s Most Important Stories

1.In a regulatory filing, Southwest Airlines presented a grim picture with respect to close-in bookings and cancellations for the current month as the rapid spread of the Delta variant is hurting air-travel demand big time. As a result of this deadly strain, the presently Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) Dallas-based carrier, which was profitable in July, now expects its August 2021 operating revenues to decline in the 15-20% band from the August 2019 actuals. The current estimation is worse than the previous outlook of a 12-17% decline, which was issued last month. Assuming the current trend to continue at least in the near term, Southwest Airlines expects operating revenues for the month of September and third-quarter 2021 to decline in the 15-25% and 15-20% ranges, respectively, from the levels achieved in the comparable period of 2019. Load factor (% of seats filled by passengers) is likely to be between 80% and 85% compared with the third-quarter 2019 actuals. Third-quarter capacity is anticipated to be comparable to third-quarter 2019 actuals. The company continues to expect its non-fuel unit costs for the September quarter to increase in the 1-5% range from the third-quarter 2019 reading. The airline still estimates economic fuel costs per gallon in the range of $2.05-$2.15 for the September quarter.

You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here

2. With air-travel demand improving in Latin America, courtesy of increased vaccination, Azul’s consolidated traffic for July surged 253% year over year. In the same time frame, capacity expanded 241%. Load factor increased 2.8 percentage points (p.p) to 82.3%. On the domestic front, traffic and capacity increased 268.6% and 252.7%, respectively, from the year-ago period’s levels, benefitting from easy comparisons. Load factor increased 3.6 p.p to 83% in July.

3. Copa Holdings’ traffic, measured in revenue passenger miles, declined 42.1% to 1.14 billion in July 2021 from the level recorded in the comparable period of 2019 as air-travel demand continues to be below the pre-pandemic level despite improving.

With this tepid demand, capacity, measured in available seat miles (ASMs), fell 36.4% from the 2019 level to 1.44 billion. With traffic declining more than the amount of capacity contraction, load factor deteriorated 780 basis points to 78.8% in July.

4. Delta aims to resume services from Seattle (thrice a week) and Detroit (four times a week) to Heathrow on Oct 7 and Oct 11, respectively. In addition, the carrier’s existing daily service between New York and Heathrow will increase to twice daily from Oct 6. To travel to London, passengers will need to provide proof of vaccination along with a negative test report (taken within three days after departure from the United States). To return to the United States, passengers only need to provide a negative test report as an evidence (taken within three days of departure from London).

5. In a bid to modernize its fleet, SkyWest (SKYW - Free Report) entered into an agreement with Delta to purchase and operate 16 new E175 aircraft. The deal falls under a multi-year capacity purchase pact between the partners. The first of the 76-seater planes is scheduled to be delivered in the second quarter of next year. SkyWest will purchase the planes from the Brazilian aerospace company Embraer to ply under the Delta network. Currently, SkyWest operates 71 E175 jets for Delta.

The update on 16 new E175 jets apart, SkyWest was in news recently when it reported better-than-expected earnings per share for second-quarter 2021. The earnings beat was mentioned in the previous week’s write up.

Performance

The following table shows the price movement of the major airline players over the past week and during the last six months.

Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: Zacks Investment Research

The table above shows that most airline stocks have traded in the green in the past week even though the gains were muted in nature. Evidently, the NYSE ARCA Airline Index has inched up 1% to $94.49 in the said period. Over the course of the past six months, the NYSE ARCA Airline Index has been flat

What's Next in the Airline Space?

With the Delta variant denting air-travel demand, we expect more U.S. carriers to follow Southwest Airlines and adjust their views for the September quarter.

 

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