I'm going to delete the name of the carriers so I don't start a flame war, but I found part of the following news release "interesting":
Geez, if NWA was reimbursed for fuel, I think they'd be profitable as well, but does it necessarily mean a profitable, efficient operation if the carrier contracting its services didn't reimburse them for high fuel costs?
XXXXXX revenue more than doubles
By August Cole, MarketWatch
Last Update: 4:30 PM ET Feb 9, 2006
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- XXXXXX on Thursday reported that fourth-quarter net earnings rose 82% and revenue more than doubled, due to the acquisition of XXXXXX Airlines and the reimbursement of jet-fuel expenses.
The XXXXXXX, XXXXXX-based company's (XXXXX :28.39, -0.04, -0.1% ) fourth-quarter net income reached $38.7 million, or 64 cents a share, up from $21.2 million or 37 cents a share in the year-ago quarter.
Analysts had expected a profit of 63 cents a share, according to Thomson First Call.
Revenue totaled $742.4 million, up from $326.7 million in the year-ago quarter. The company, according to its contracts flying for other carriers, gets reimbursed for jet-fuel costs.
XXXXXXXX operates flights for XXXXXX Airlines' XXXXXX service and XXXXXX service.
The company said that flying-operations expenses more than doubled to $409.3 million, up from $171.2 million a year-ago.
Capacity increased 125% during the quarter; the company's fleet of jets totaled 380 planes, up from 210 in the year-ago period.
XXXXXX announced that it would buy XXXXXX from XXXXXX last August for about $427 million. The deal closed in September. See full story.
On Thursday, XXXXXX stock ended down by 3.2% to $28.43. So far this year, the company's shares are up 9.3%.
Calyon Securities reiterated its buy rating and $34 price target on Thursday.
"With the XXX acquisition, we believe XXXXXX has expanded growth opportunities for 2006, mitigated its business risk with XXXXXX, and decreased its business concentration in XXXXXXX flying," wrote Calyon analyst Ray Neidl. "We believe that on a long-term basis there is value in the shares, especially as XXXXXX has negotiated new long-term, guaranteed contracts for both itself and XXXXXX with XXXXXX for 15-year terms."
Geez, if NWA was reimbursed for fuel, I think they'd be profitable as well, but does it necessarily mean a profitable, efficient operation if the carrier contracting its services didn't reimburse them for high fuel costs?