Fourth Quarter 2003 Airline Financial Data; Regional Passenger Airlines Report Highest Rate of Domestic Profit
Monday, May 17, 2004 - The seven largest regional airlines had the highest domestic operating margins ― an industry measure of profitability ― of any carrier groups during the fourth quarter of 2003, the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) of the U.S. Department of Transportation reported today in a release of preliminary data. This group of regional carriers reported a domestic operating profit margin of 14.1 percent for the fourth quarter, above the profit margin of 5.3 percent reported by the seven largest low-cost air carriers and the 7.9 percent loss margin reported by seven largest network carriers (Table 1). Domestic operating margin measures operating profit or loss as a percentage of the airline's total domestic operating revenue. The industry operating margin declined from the third quarter to the fourth quarter. Quarter-to-quarter changes may be affected by seasonal factors. For the full year, the group of regional airlines had domestic operating profit margins of 13.2 percent, above the 6.5 percent profit margin reported by the low-cost carriers and the 9.2 percent loss margin reported by the network carriers. The network carriers reported a domestic operating loss of $4.7 billion for full year 2003, while the regional carriers reported profits of $860.0 million and the low-cost carriers reported profits of $799.7 million (Table 1A). The selected low-cost carriers showed an improved profit margin over the fourth quarter of 2002 while the selected network carriers reduced their operating loss margin from a year earlier. The largest operating loss margins were reported by American Airlines, United Airlines and Continental Airlines, all network carriers (Table 2). The top operating profit margins were reported by JetBlue Airways, a low-cost carrier (Table 3), American Eagle and Comair, both regional carriers (Table 4). Network carriers operate a significant portion of their flights using at least one hub where connections are made for flights on a spoke system. Low-cost carriers are those that the industry generally recognizes as operating under a low-cost business model. Regional carriers provide service from small cities, using primarily regional jets to support the network carriers' hub and spoke systems. The selected groups consist of the seven carriers with the highest annual reported revenue in each group. The regional/commuter carriers had the highest unit revenues with 15.2 cents per available seat mile (Table 5). These higher unit revenues generally reflect the shorter flights flown by these carriers. They average flights of 300 to 450 miles, compared to the 1,000-mile average stage length for the network carriers. Domestic unit revenue measures revenues against capacity by dividing domestic operating revenues by domestic available seat miles. Overall, the highest unit revenues were reported by Atlantic Coast Airlines, Air Wisconsin and American Eagle Airlines (Table 8). The lowest unit revenues were reported by ATA Airlines, JetBlue and Spirit Airlines (Table 7). US Airways reported the highest unit revenues among the selected network carriers (Table 6). The regional carriers also reported the highest domestic unit costs – 13.0 cents per available seat mile (Table 9). The low-cost carriers reported the lowest unit costs – 7.5 cents per available seat mile. All of the selected low-cost carriers had lower unit costs than any of the regional or network carriers. (Tables 10, 11 and 12). Domestic unit cost measures expenses against capacity by dividing domestic operating expenses by domestic available seat miles. The carriers with the top unit costs were Atlantic Coast, US Airways and Air Wisconsin. The carriers with the lowest unit costs were JetBlue, ATA and Southwest Airlines. The regional carriers also reported the highest domestic passenger revenue yields — at 24.4 cents per revenue passenger mile, nearly twice the rate compared to the network and low cost carriers (Table 13). Domestic passenger revenue yield measures passenger revenues against total travel by dividing domestic passenger revenues by domestic revenue passenger miles. The top passenger revenue yields were reported by Atlantic Coast, American Eagle and Air Wisconsin (Table 16). The lowest passenger revenue yields were reported by ATA, JetBlue and Spirit (Table 15). US Airways reported the highest revenue yield of any network carrier (Table 14). Table 1. Quarterly Domestic Operating profit/loss margin (in percent)Passenger Airlines by Group
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2 Table 1A. Annual Domestic Operating profit/loss margin (in percent)Passenger Airlines by Group
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2 Table 2. Quarterly Domestic Operating profit/loss margin (in percent)Network Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2 Table 3. Quarterly Domestic Operating profit/loss margin (in percent)Low-Cost Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2 Table 4. Quarterly Domestic Operating profit/loss margin (in percent)Regional Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2 Table 5. Airline Domestic Unit Revenue (Cents Per Mile)Passenger Airlines by Group
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data Table 6. Airline Domestic Unit Revenue (Cents Per Mile)Network Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data Table 7. Airline Domestic Unit Revenue (Cents Per Mile)Low-Cost Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule p1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 8. Airline Domestic Unit Revenue (Cents Per Mile)Regional Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule p1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 9. Airline Domestic Unit Costs (Cents per Mile)Passenger Airlines by Group
Source: Form 41; Schedule p1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 10. Airline Domestic Unit Costs (Cents per Mile)Network Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 11. Airline Domestic Unit Costs (Cents per Mile)Low-Cost Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 12. Airline Domestic Unit Costs (Cents per Mile)Regionals
Source: Form 41; Schedule p1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 13. Domestic Passenger Revenue Yield (Cents per Mile)Passenger Airlines by Group
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 14. Domestic Passenger Revenue Yield (Cents per Mile)Network Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100: T2 Data. Table 15. Domestic Passenger Revenue Yield (Cents per Mile)Low-Cost Carriers
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data. Table 16. Domestic Passenger Revenue Yield (Cents per Mile)Regionals
Source: Form 41; Schedule P1.2. T100; T2 Data. Additional airline financial data can be found on the BTS website at TranStats, the Intermodal Transportation Database, at http://transtats.bts.gov. Click on "aviation", then on "Air Carrier Financial Reports (Form 41 Financial Data)", then click on "Schedule P-12." Data are compiled from quarterly financial and monthly traffic reports filed with BTS by commercial air carriers. Financial and traffic data are preliminary and include data received by BTS as of May 11. Data are subject to revision. Revised data from third-quarter 2003 and previous quarters are posted on the BTS website at http://transtats.bts.gov. BTS has scheduled June 14 for release of first-quarter 2004 data. Find this web page at:
http://www.bts.gov/press_releases/2004/bts012_04/html/bts012_04.html |