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Delta Air Lines Sees Cash Burn Rate
Edging Closer To Neutral
Delta
Air Lines (DAL) on Tuesday said it expected its daily cash burn to narrow to $10
million-$12 million in the fourth quarter, as the carrier navigates through a
"steady but stable recovery in demand." However, Delta stock and other airline
stocks were mixed, after surging Monday on coronavirus vaccine
news.
The
carrier made the forecast after United Airlines (UAL) on Monday also pointed to
further rebound in demand, saying it expected Thanksgiving week to be "its
busiest since March."
Delta's
fourth-quarter expectations, outlined in presentation materials for an industry
conference, come after the coronavirus pandemic, and travel restrictions put in
place around the world, caused travel demand and airline stocks to
plummet.
The
carrier expects fourth-quarter revenue to be down 65% to 70% vs. a year earlier,
better than the lows the industry went through in April. And it said net sales
"continue to trend higher" when compared to the third quarter.
The
company expected flight capacity to fall 40% to 45% in the fourth quarter, as
demand remains subdued and airlines park jets they don't currently
need.
Airlines have tried to rein in their cash burn as
passengers stay off flights. Delta said it expected daily cash burn in the month
of December to be $10 million. Daily cash burn averaged $24 million in Q3, down
from Q2's average burn rate of $43 million.
The
company expected operating expenses for the fourth quarter to be 50% lower than
a year ago.
Delta
Stock, Airline Stocks
Delta
stock rose 0.7% to close at 37.04 in the stock market today. DAL stock is still
above a 35.17 buy point from a bottoming base cleared Monday. But shares were
still well off highs reached last year.
Delta
stock has a 44 Composite Rating. Its EPS Rating is 7.
The
broader market jumped on Monday, after Pfizer (PFE) and BioNTech (BNTX) said
their coronavirus vaccine candidate was found to be more than 90% effective in
preventing the disease in people that hadn't shown evidence of prior infection,
based on an early analysis from a Phase 3 study.
Pfizer
may submit its coronavirus vaccine for emergency FDA approval later this month,
but it would likely be months before it's widely available. Meanwhile, U.S.
coronavirus cases are now rising by more than 100,000 a day, while several
European countries are in partial lockdowns to try to control spiraling Covid-19
cases.
But
stocks that were hard-hit by the pandemic, like airline stocks and companies
like Disney (DIS), jumped on the news. Delta stock jumped 17% on Monday.
American Airlines (AAL) and United Airlines made similar advances.
Among
other airline stocks on Tuesday, United Airlines retreated 3.1%. United, on
Monday, said it would add more than 1,400 domestic flights the week of Nov.
23.
United
said it expected around half of its customers traveling for Thanksgiving to book
flights less than 30 days prior to departure, up from around 40% last
year.
American Airlines stock gave up 6.2%. Southwest
Airlines (LUV) added 2.1%.
The
pandemic has forced the airline industry to furlough thousands of employees,
seek a second round of government rescue aid, and raise or borrow money. Delta,
in the presentation on Tuesday, said it had raised more than $25 billion in
financing this year.
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