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Analyst Predicts 'Huge' 2006 Airline Turnaround
Aviation Week & Space Technology
09/26/2005, page 15
Edited by Frances Fiorino
Flying in the face of the prevailing gloomy view of the U.S. airline industry, consultant Edmund S. Greenslet is predicting a huge 2006 turnaround for most of the nine largest U.S. airlines. He reaches into history to explain how airlines have always been slow to respond to high fuel costs, the real culprit of 2005. In his monthly report, The Airline Monitor, Greenslet points to recovering yields and sharp cost-cutting as setting the stage for change. "The real answer to higher fuel costs is higher yield and revenue, and that is beginning to happen," he wrote. He projects a 2.2% rise in yield next year and a similar decline in unit costs, with a slight increase in load factor. The forecast model predicts an aggregate operating profit of $2.9 billion for all nine, with Delta Air Lines and US Airways still in the losing column. Total net income will suffer from restructuring charges related to Chapter 11. The basic trends in industry fundamentals have turned positive, he says. "The darkest days are, we believe, over and the sun is rising."
Jim
Aviation Week & Space Technology
09/26/2005, page 15
Edited by Frances Fiorino
Flying in the face of the prevailing gloomy view of the U.S. airline industry, consultant Edmund S. Greenslet is predicting a huge 2006 turnaround for most of the nine largest U.S. airlines. He reaches into history to explain how airlines have always been slow to respond to high fuel costs, the real culprit of 2005. In his monthly report, The Airline Monitor, Greenslet points to recovering yields and sharp cost-cutting as setting the stage for change. "The real answer to higher fuel costs is higher yield and revenue, and that is beginning to happen," he wrote. He projects a 2.2% rise in yield next year and a similar decline in unit costs, with a slight increase in load factor. The forecast model predicts an aggregate operating profit of $2.9 billion for all nine, with Delta Air Lines and US Airways still in the losing column. Total net income will suffer from restructuring charges related to Chapter 11. The basic trends in industry fundamentals have turned positive, he says. "The darkest days are, we believe, over and the sun is rising."
Jim