U.S. carriers cost struggles overshadow travel demand surge Reuters                                         July 21, 2022 03:49:00 PM ET                                                                                               
 
  CHICAGO, July 21 (Reuters) - U.S.  carriers are struggling to offset higher costs even as booming travel  demand has given them strong pricing power, raising questions about  their ability to shield profit once consumer demand softens.
  Those  worries are battering airline shares, taking the focus away from what  is shaping up to be the industry's strongest earnings season in three  years.
  Shares of American Airlines Group Inc and United Airlines fell more than 9% on Thursday even after both carriers posted their first quarterly profit without U.S. government aid since the COVID-19 pandemic began.
  Airlines  expect travel demand to hold up even in the second half of the year as  there is little evidence of higher fares, persistently high inflation  and rising interest rates curbing consumer spending.
  But staffing  gaps and aircraft shortages have made it tougher to ramp up capacity  and fully tap booming demand. In fact, carriers have been forced to cut  flights and make costly staffing adjustments to avoid cancellations and  delays, driving up operating costs.
  American, United and Delta Air Lines  see no let up in cost pressure this year as capacity constraints are  not allowing them to operate as many flights as they did before the  pandemic.
  Delta doesn't plan to add more flights  for the rest of the year. Similarly, United intends to keep its capacity  below the pre-pandemic level in the current and fourth quarters.
  To ensure adequate staffing, they are being forced to spend more. Delta, for example, expects to spend over $700 million this year in overtime and premium pay, 50% higher than in 2019.
  Carriers  are also hamstrung by construction projects at airports and staffing  gaps among air-traffic controllers. United said it will cut 200 flights a  day in Newark in September as a result of runway construction.
  United Chief Executive Scott Kirby  said the company will prioritize operational reliability by  overstaffing until the entire aviation infrastructure returns to normal.
  "It means that there will be cost pressures," Kirby told investors on an earnings call.
  Labor  unions and some analysts blame the industry's decision to let go  thousands of workers at the height of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020  for its staffing challenges. Carriers have been aggressively hiring, but  training backlogs have left them still short-staffed.
  Meanwhile, a rush to staff up is driving up labor costs.
  American  has offered its pilots a base pay increase of about 17% after United  agreed to a double-digit pay hike for its pilots. To attract and retain  talent, the Texas-based carrier has also announced hefty pay increases for pilots at its regional carriers.
  "As an industry, pilot wages are going to increase," said American Chief Executive Robert Isom. "And that's something that the industry as a whole is going to have to digest."
  Airlines  are also facing higher fuel costs, but a decline in global prices is  expected to offer some relief. Yet, United warned that higher fuel  prices would be the new normal for the industry. It expects its fuel  bill this year to be $9 billion higher than in 2019.
  Strong  consumer demand, thus far, has allowed carriers to mitigate  inflationary pressure with higher fares. Analysts, however, are not sure  they will have the same pricing power in the fall when leisure travel  bookings tend to slow down.
  Christopher Raite, senior analyst at Third Bridge, said business travel spending will have to pick up the slack.
  But  the industry's struggle to get operations back on a smoother track as  well as a worsening economy have cast a shadow on business travel  demand. Many companies have already started tightening their purse  strings.
 
  "The airline industry is fundamentally less profitable  than it was pre-pandemic," Raite said. "If we are to see corporations  cut back, that would be a bad sign for airlines."
 
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