Shares of Delta Air Lines Inc (NYSE: DAL) opened down this morning after the air carrier issued weaker than expected guidance for its first financial quarter.
The legacy carrier is now expecting between 15 cents and 40 cents of per-share earnings in Q1. In comparison, experts had called for a much higher 59 cents of EPS. Still, CEO Ed Bastian said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box”:
Q1 is always our weakest quarter. We did put the full cost for full quarter in for our new pilot contract on assumption it gets approved. So, the fact that we’ll make a profit in Q1 [versus] over $1.0 billion loss last year, I think it’ll be a good result.
If approved, the said contract will ensure a more than 30% increase in pilots’ wages over three years. Delta Air Lines stock is still up 15% for the year at writing.
For the full financial year, Delta Air Lines now forecasts a 15% to 20% annualised growth in revenue on up to $6.0 of per-share earnings. CEO Bastian added:
We’re seeing great demand. [Previously], I spoke of $300 billion of inherent unmet demand that our industry has not been able to fulfill because of pandemic. We’ll continue to see tens of billions of dollars of incremental demand coming into our space. I think this will go on for several years.
Adjusted non-fuel cost, as per Delta Air Lines, was $7.8 billion this quarter, up nearly 3.0% on a year-over-three-year basis.
Wall Street currently has a consensus “buy” rating on this airline stock.
Other notable figures in the earnings report include $11.96 billion of operating expense – up from $10.04 billion in the fourth quarter of 2019. Delta Air Lines expects $2.0 billion in free cash flow this year, helping its return to investment grade rating in 2024. The Chief Executive also noted:
This was one of the most difficult years operationally we’ve ever had. Still, $2.70 billion of profits in the year. It’s the 7th highest profit level in our 100-year history in a recovery scenario.
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