Continental posts quarterly loss

Houston-based Continental Airlines annonced that it posted a net loss of $17 million for the second quarter, citing weak domestic fare prices, high fuel costs and expenses associated with retiring aircraft.
Continental, which is the No. 5 U.S. carrier, reported net income for the year-earlier period of $79 million, or $1.10 a share, which was primarily due to war-related government subsidies. The latest quarter’s loss included a charge of $19 million for the retirement of leased MD-80 jets. Excluding that charge, Continental would have eked out a profit of $2 million during the quarter. Continental’s total revenue improved 13%, to $2.51 billion from $2.22 billion a year earlier, as passenger revenue improved 15.1% to $2.3 billion. The company’s consolidated load factor increased to 77.6% from 75.9%.
Continental has generally competed well against the rising tide of low-cost carriers as the company’s chapter 22 (i.e., two prior chapter 11 cases) case tends to focus management on lean operations. Nevetheless, management reported that the company will have to cut costs beyond its original projection of $900 million annually to offset lower than expected ticket prices and high fuel costs.
A day earlier, Delta Air Lines reported a higher-than-expected loss of $1.96 billion for the second quarter, with weak fares undercutting a surge in passengers that pushed traffic to its highest level since the summer of 2000. Delta is the prime prospect to be the next American carrier to land in chapter 11.

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