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US Airways 2Q profit down six per cent

July 24, 2013, Dallas, Tx. - US Airways says second-quarter profit fell 6 per cent from last year but still beat Wall Street expectations as the carrier heads into a merger with American Airlines.


July 24, 2013  By Carey Fredericks

Passenger traffic rose 6 per cent in the quarter, compared with an increase of less than 1 per cent on Delta Air Lines, which also reported second-quarter results on Wednesday.

Passengers who felt more crowded on US Airways weren't imagining things. The average flight was 86 per cent full, an increase of 1.4 percentage points from a year earlier.

But if they had less room to move around, at least many passengers got a break from higher fares. US Airways said that the amount passengers paid per mile fell 3 per cent from last year, with much of the decline on US Airways Express regional flights. That's another sign that airlines have been unable to push prices higher in the face of fairly flat travel demand.

Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways Group Inc. said that net income was $287 million, or $1.40 per share, in the April-June quarter. That's down from $306 million, or $1.54 per share, a year ago. The company blamed an $85 million income tax provision that was triggered as it
used up an allowance for operating losses carried over from previous years.

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Excluding merger and debt-retirement costs, US Airways said that it would have earned $1.58 per share. That topped the $1.52 per share that analysts expected, according to FactSet.

Revenue rose 3 per cent to $3.87 billion, beating analysts' forecast of $3.84 billion.

Fuel costs fell 4 per cent but labour costs rose by a similar percentage. Total operating expenses increased 1 per cent.

US Airways shares rose 63 cents, or 3.5 per cent, to $18.68 in morning trading.

CEO Doug Parker said his airline's second-quarter performance "provides excellent momentum as we transition into the new American Airlines. The teams are working very well together and we continue to expect to close the merger in the third quarter.''

Antitrust regulators at the Justice Department are still reviewing the merger, which would create the world's biggest airline. It would keep the American name but be led by Parker and
most of his executive team.

Parker has been trying to head off the possibility that the Justice Department could try to force the companies to give up takeoff and landing slots at busy Reagan National Airport outside Washington. The combined company would be easily the biggest carrier there, but Parker has argued that United, Delta and Southwest were more dominant at key airports after their mergers, which the regulators allowed to go through.

The merger also faces a ruling on Aug. 15 by the federal judge overseeing the bankruptcy reorganization of American's parent, AMR Corp. AMR creditors are expected to favour the merger.

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