- Adjusted earnings per share: $1.51 versus $1.53 expected.
- Adjusted revenue: $12.84 billion versus $12.87 billion expected.
Delta forecasts another profit after summer boom drives record revenue
Delta Air Lines expects to post another profit in the last quarter of the year and said both leisure and business travel continue to recover, brushing off concerns over shakiness in the economy.
“Global demand is continuing to ramp as consumers shift spend to experiences, businesses return to travel and international markets continue to reopen,” CEO Ed Bastian said on an earnings call Thursday. “Demand has not come close to being quenched by a hectic summer travel season.”
The Atlanta-based airline was the first U.S. carrier to report third-quarter results, and its upbeat forecast contrasts with strains on other industries, like some retailers, and worries about high inflation.
Delta shares added 4% on Thursday, outpacing the broader market’s rally.
The carrier said it expects earnings per share of $1 to $1.25 in the fourth quarter, with revenue topping the same period of 2019 by 5% to 9%, a sign higher airfares will stay firm.
For the third quarter, Delta reported net income of $695 million, or $1.08 per share, down from a $1.5 billion profit three years earlier, on record revenue of close to $14 billion, the results of a surge in summer travel with high fares to match. Adjusting for one-time items, Delta posted earnings per share of $1.51, while adjusted revenue came in at $12.8 billion, 3% above 2019 levels, despite a smaller schedule.
Here’s how Delta performed in the third quarter, compared with Wall Street expectations based on Refinitiv consensus estimates: