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JetBlue shares jump 12% after surprise profit, $3 billion aircraft spending deferral

JetBlue is deferring more Airbus planes to save money Read more...

A JetBlue Airways jet comes in for a landing after flights earlier were grounded during an FAA system outage at Laguardia Airport in New York City, New York, U.S., January 11, 2023. 

Mike Segar | Reuters

JetBlue Airways shares jumped 12% on Tuesday after the airline posted a surprise profit and said it would defer another $3 billion in aircraft spending through 2029 to improve cash flow.

The carrier posted a $25 million profit for the second quarter, down nearly 82% from last year. Wall Street analysts had expected a quarterly loss.

JetBlue hasn’t posted an annual profit since before the pandemic. It has spent recent months cutting unprofitable routes and reducing costs to try to stop losing money as it faces higher expenses and an oversupplied domestic market.

JetBlue said Tuesday that it has halted 50 routes and is focusing more on service from New York, New England and Puerto Rico, where it has historically been strong. It also is trying to better deploy its planes outfitted with premium seats like its Mint aircraft to maximize revenue.

JetBlue says the changes will help it add $800 million to $900 million in pretax profit from 2025 through 2027.

It’s deferring delivery of 44 Airbus A321neo aircraft until 2030 or later. The airline has also been impacted by a Pratt & Whitney engine recall.

“We have and are taking aggressive action on every front,” CEO Joanna Geraghty said on an earnings call on Tuesday.

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Geraghty said Tuesday the airline is taking additional steps to improve reliability, such as adding more buffer time to flights. JetBlue has consistently ranked toward the bottom of U.S. carriers in punctuality.

The airline plans to cut capacity by as much as 6% in the third quarter and as much as 5% for the full year. Even with the reductions it expects third-quarter revenue to drop as much as 5.5% from last year and full-year sales to be down as much as 6% over 2023.

Airline executives have blamed weaker-than-expected revenue this summer on an oversupply of capacity.

Tuesday’s results and the investor reception was a win for Geraghty, a JetBlue veteran, who took the reins in February. Hours after she started in the top role, activist investor Carl Icahn disclosed a nearly 10% stake in the company. He won two board seats days later.

JetBlue and Spirit Airlines called off their merger agreement earlier this year after the New York airline’s planned acquisition of the budget carrier was blocked by a federal judge. Both carriers have said they are challenged in competing with larger rivals.

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