Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization at US Airways amounted to 6.9 percent of revenue in the second quarter, below the 9.6 percent average for 14 carriers tracked by Bloomberg Industries and less than every company except AMR and Hawaiian Holdings Inc. US Airways, the smallest of the nation’s major full-fare carriers, trades for 4.5 times earnings from the past year, half the valuation for the Bloomberg U.S. Airlines Index.
“There’s a perception that US Airways is one of the financially weaker companies,” Jim Corridore, an equity analyst at S&P in New York, said in a phone interview yesterday. “They don’t have a merger partner lined up like United did or Delta did. They clearly don’t have as strong an international route network as companies like American or Delta or United.”