Text size: increase text sizedecrease text size

Southwest profits from fuel hedging

Carrier earns $321 million in 2Q

DALLAS - Southwest Airlines Co. earned a profit in the second quarter and beat Wall Street expectations by continuing to rely on financial deals that lowered its fuel costs.

Revenue increased by 11 percent as Southwest raised fares.

But in a nod to high fuel costs and other problems facing the airline industry, growth-oriented Southwest said it might not grow at all next year.

Southwest, the biggest carrier at Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, said yesterday that it earned $321 million, or 44 cents per share, up 15 percent from a year ago, when the airline earned $278 million, or 36 cents per share.

Excluding special items, Southwest said it would have earned $121 million, or 16 cents per share. That beat analysts' forecast of 12 cents per share, according to a survey by Thomson Financial.

Dallas-based Southwest posted its 69th straight profitable quarter while many other airlines lost money, and it is mostly because of fuel hedging - financial transactions that Southwest uses to lock in lower prices for most of its fuel.

The transactions earned $511 million in the quarter, nearly double the company's entire profit.

Despite its string of profitable quarters, Southwest is under pressure to control costs and boost sales as its fuel-hedging contracts expire over the next few years.

"We cannot stand still," Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Gary C. Kelly said. "We must continue to make the necessary adjustments to adapt to higher jet fuel prices and restore our profit margins."

Southwest has raised fares and cut service on less productive routes, while adding flights where it can take advantage of rivals' weakness.

In a concession to high fuel costs, it also scaled back growth plans to 4 percent or less for 2008 - other carriers are slashing U.S. capacity - and Kelly said it might not increase capacity next year.

Revenue in the second quarter rose to $2.87 billion from $2.58 billion a year earlier.

Southwest's streak of profitable quarters going back to early 1991 will be challenged in the fourth quarter. The analysts surveyed by Thomson expect the company to eke out a penny-per-share profit, but Jamie Baker of JPMorgan Chase & Co. said a loss is likely because of expensive fuel and the tendency for other costs to rise late in the year.

Southwest has hedged about 80 percent of its third-quarter fuel needs, down from 90 percent a year ago. The coverage falls to 70 percent next year, 40 percent in 2010 and 20 percent in 2011 and 2012 - with steadily rising prices as well.

Related topic galleries: J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Air Transportation, Air Transportation Industry, Southwest Airlines Company, Transportation

Get home delivery of The Sun and save over 50% off the newsstand price

Maryland gas watch

Find cheaper gas
Check prices at area gas stations by ZIP code and find the lowest rates in the region with our new interactive gas map.

Baltimore-area lowest gas prices
Historical gas price charts

Grocery store comparison

Each Thursday, a member of The Sun's staff visits three grocery stores in the same part of the Baltimore region to compare prices of selected items.

Maryland home sales
Find out where homes are selling in your neighborhood, or search for sales from across the region
Also see: 2006 sales | 2005 sales

Features

Featured Video Advertisers

Do's and Don'ts for consumers
> Scam Watch archive

Stephen L. Rosenstein, co-chairman of Greater Baltimore, SCORE Chapter No. 3, offers tips for business owners.