Delta Air Lines Raises Projections for 2023
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Delta Air Lines announced during its Investor Day meeting on
Tuesday that the second-quarter profit outlook and full-year earnings
projections would reach the high end of previous estimates due to sustained
travel demand.
Delta CEO Ed Bastian said travel demand remains high as consumer
spending shifts away from goods to services, with the airline’s customers being
well positioned due to “wealth accumulation during the pandemic.”
“Travel is going gangbusters, and it’s going to continue to
go gangbusters because we still have a tremendous amount of demand coming,” Bastian
said. “Our consumer is in really good shape.”
While Bastian and other Delta executives believe they will experience
“years” of favorable travel demand, officials played down concerns about high
inflation, rising interest rates and staffing shortages impacting the company.
Data from the meeting showed that high-income travelers
accounted for 75 percent of spending on air travel in 2021, which aided in
expected free cash flow rising to $3 billion, up from $2 billion.
The airline expects a return on invested capital of more
than 13 percent, compared with earlier guidance of low double-digit growth. For
2024, Delta still expects a free cash flow of more than $4 billion, an
operating margin of 13-15 percent and a Return on Invested Capital in the mid-teens.
The company also revealed the revenue outlook for the June
quarter rose to 17-18 percent from the previous guidance of 15-17 percent. For
all of 2023, it expects revenue to climb 17-20 percent, compared with earlier
guidance of 15-20 percent.
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