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Alaska Air sees $150 million profit hit from MAX 9 groundings

Published 01/25/2024, 06:11 AM
Updated 01/25/2024, 06:36 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-900ER airplane prepares to land at Vancouver's international airport in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada, February 5, 2019.  REUTERS/Ben Nelms/File Photo

(Reuters) -Alaska Air Group, the operator of the Boeing (NYSE:BA) plane that suffered a mid-air incident earlier this month, said on Thursday it expects a $150-million profit hit in 2024 from the more-than-two-week-long grounding of 737 MAX 9 aircraft.

Earlier this month, an Alaska 737 MAX 9 aircraft was forced to make an emergency landing after a cabin panel fell off during a flight full of passengers. The Federal Aviation Administration subsequently grounded over 170 MAX 9 jets across carriers.

Including the impact, the airline forecast 2024 adjusted earnings per share to be between $3.00 and $5.00. Analysts polled by LSEG had expected a profit of $4.93 this year.

Alaska also cast doubt on its capacity growth target of 3% to 5% this year, saying: "Given the grounding, and the potential for future delivery delays, the Company expects capacity growth to be at or below the lower end of this range."

The airline swung to a fourth-quarter loss, from a year-ago profit, hurt by an increase in fuel and labor expenses.

The U.S. aviation regulator lifted the grounding on Wednesday, but also barred Boeing from expanding production of its best-selling 737 MAX narrowbody planes, which is expected to have wide-ranging effects across the industry.

Alaska executives are set to address investors and analysts later in the day. The airline placed orders for 42 737-10 and 10 737-9 jets in 2022, as part of a plan to sunset Airbus aircraft by the end of 2023.

Alaska and United Airlines together account for 70% of Boeing's MAX 9 fleet and had been forced to cancel thousands of flights in the wake of the incident.

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Alaska said it expects to bring the first few planes back into service on Friday and that it discovered and immediately corrected a minor fault on one 737-900ER plane after an FAA-recommended inspection as part of its scrutiny of Boeing.

The groundings had no impact on the company's results for the October-December quarter, during which its revenue rose nearly 3%, to $2.55 billion, due to strong travel demand.

However, an increase in labor and fuel-related costs pushed Alaska to a loss of $2 million, or 2 cents per share for the quarter, from a profit of $22 million, or 17 cents per share, a year ago.

Latest comments

Yup ..$150 million profits went down the drain caused by a couple stupid door bolt instead of a more serious incident
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