Even with fuel prices expected to remain low or drop further, a potential plunge in passenger traffic had US Airways executives reluctant to predict Thursday how Charlotte's dominant carrier will fare this year.
“Extremely murky” is how Scott Kirby, US Airways president, described the 2009 outlook, adding, “I don't know how anyone could give a credible forecast for the full year.”
Kirby's comments came during a conference call with analysts and the media a few hours after US Airways reported a $541 million loss for the fourth quarter of 2008 and a staggering $2.2 billion loss for the year – the latter a $2.6 billion swing from a $427 million profit in 2007.
Nearly every major carrier has reported similar big losses after a year in which oil prices surged to historic highs, nearing $150 a barrel in July. Prices then dropped sharply in the second half of the year, falling to less than $45 in December. But US Airways and other airlines didn't see major gains because they had locked in fuel prices at the previously higher levels to hedge against future increases.
“Clearly from a financial perspective, we're happy to put 2008 behind us,” said Doug Parker, chairman and chief executive of US Airways.
Shares in US Airways closed Thursday at $6.47, down 83 cents, or 11.4 percent.
With its regional airline partners, the Tempe, Ariz.-based carrier operates about 85 percent of flights in Charlotte, its largest hub. Thursday's call came two weeks after US Airways Flight 1549 from New York to Charlotte ditched in the Hudson River, its engines disabled by an apparent bird strike.
All 150 passengers and five crew members survived, and Parker said public praise for the crew “has just been extremely nice to see.”
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