Daily Times (Primos, PA)

United Continenta­l cuts outlook on Harvey impact, fuel costs

- By David Koenig

DALLAS » United Airlines says Hurricane Harvey and a fare war contribute­d to a loss of $400 million in expected revenue, and the storm saddled the company with higher prices for jet fuel.

The company said Wednesday that a key revenue-per-seat figure would fall by up to 5 percent for the third quarter. Shares of United Continenta­l Holdings Inc. dropped in midday trading.

United suffered more than any other airline from Harvey’s deluge. The Continenta­l side of the company has longtime roots in Houston, and United still operates one of its biggest hub operations at Bush Interconti­nental Airport, which was closed for nearly a week by flooding.

United canceled 7,400 flights because of the storm, and it doesn’t expect to resume a full, pre-storm Houston schedule until later this week. Even then, Houstonian­s might be traveling less than before, the airline said.

The Chicago-based company said the revenue shortfall was due to Harvey’s canceled flights, falling demand in Guam since North Korea threatened that its missiles could strike near the U.S. territory in the Pacific, and lower prices.

United is locked in a fare war with Spirit Airlines in Chicago, Denver, Houston and Newark, New Jersey. United is fighting the discount airlines by rolling out so-called basic economy fares, which offer passengers a lower price but fewer amenities — they can’t even stow a bag in the overhead bin.

For United, there was a hitch this summer: The airline lost customers to other big carriers that didn’t have similar basic-economy tickets on many routes, Chief Financial Officer Andrew Levy said at a Cowen and Co. investor conference in Boston.

For example, if United sold basic economy for $200 and American Airlines matched the fare for a better regular economy seat, customers would pick the $200 ticket with fewer limits on American.

Delta pioneered basic economy, but American didn’t go beyond a trial run until Tuesday. Levy said United will temporaril­y scale back its own basic-economy program.

United said it now expects that revenue for each seat flown one mile, will drop by between 3 percent and 5 percent in the third quarter. United had previously forecast the closely watched figure would range between down 1 percent and up 1 percent, compared with a year earlier.

The airline also forecast a sharply lower profit margin, partly because it now expects to pay about 16 cents more per gallon, a 10 percent jump, for fuel since Harvey hit Texas on Aug. 25 and shut down many refineries.

United also renegotiat­ed an aircraft order to buy a smaller version of the long-haul Airbus A350. United will delay deliveries until 2022 but will increase the order by 10 jets, to 45.

The shares fell $1.45, or 2.4 percent, to $59.65, in midday trading.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A United Airlines plane is towed at George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston Tuesday. United Airlines said Hurricane Harvey and a fare war contribute­d to a loss of $400 million in expected revenue, and the storm saddled the company with higher...
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A United Airlines plane is towed at George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston Tuesday. United Airlines said Hurricane Harvey and a fare war contribute­d to a loss of $400 million in expected revenue, and the storm saddled the company with higher...

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