One Trade Not Worth Considering In 2019: Airline Stocks

 | Jan 14, 2019 03:01

Investors in airline stocks had a rough ride in 2018. Turbulence was spurred by a variety of industry specific issues including highly volatile oil prices, capacity expansions—which include adding routes and bolstering hubs, all of which cut into profit margins—as well as slowing demand from lucrative business travelers. Share prices remained under pressure throughout the year.

It doesn't seem as if 2019 will be any different. During the past 10 days, airline executives have trimmed profit forecasts in a bid to prepare investors for a more troubled journey ahead. Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL) jolted the sector on January 3, when the company cut its revenue forecasts for the second time in two months.

Fourth-quarter revenue from each seat flown a mile, referred to as unit revenue, will rise 3% from a year earlier, according to the Atlanta-based airline, down from a previously forecast 3.5% gain.

The news from the largest US carrier, American Airlines (NASDAQ:AAL) wasn’t promising either. Last week, the company trimmed its guidance for 2018, saying it now expects adjusted earnings of $4.40-$4.60 a share for 2018, down from an October forecast of $4.50-$5 a share.

American also cut its expectations for unit revenue. They predicted that fourth quarter unit revenue rose 1.5% from a year ago, after previously projecting it could climb as much as 3.5%.

According to American Airlines management, “a lower than anticipated improvement over a strong fourth quarter of 2017 in the domestic market,” is the main culprit for the guidance cut, which is similar to the reasoning used by Delta to explain its unit revenue miss.

h2 Buy Shares After Recent Plunge?/h2