Delta Air Lines Inc on Thursday reported a higher-than-expected profit for the second quarter and said it would make fewer seats available to the United Kingdom and elsewhere than previously planned this autumn so ticket prices do not drop.
Atlanta-based Delta also said it would increase its flight capacity - its seats and how far it flies them - one percentage point less than it had expected for the fourth quarter to match reduced demand.
Some of the biggest cuts will involve the United Kingdom. Delta, The No 2 US airline by passenger traffic, said weaker sterling and economic uncertainty surrounding Britain's upcoming exit from the European Union caused it to reduce US-UK capacity by six percentage points for later this year.
The decision comes during heightened competition from transatlantic rivals. Delta has said flights added by the likes of Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA exceeded demand and threatened to drive down fares to Europe; US airline unions have lobbied to block two of Norwegian's subsidiaries from starting US service as well.
In addition, "the large year-on-year savings driven by lower fuel are largely behind us," Chief Executive Officer Ed Bastian said in a news release.
Concerns about rising oil prices, excess capacity and potential downturns that would hurt travel have lowered the industry's shares, with Delta's falling more than 20 percent this year.
The company's stock was up 0.6 percent in premarket trading.
Delta said earnings rose 4 percent to $1.55 billion in the second quarter from a year earlier.
Excluding special items such as settled fuel hedges, the profit came to $1.47 per share. Analysts on average expected $1.42, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Copyright Reuters, 2016

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