Delta foresees 'fantastic year' in 2015 thanks to $1.7B in fuel savings

The falling price of jet fuel will help profit next year despite airline's hedging.

Bloomberg News
December 12, 2014 at 2:10AM
In this Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012 photo, a Delta Air Lines grounds crew refuels an airplane at the gate at JFK International airport in New York. Flying could get cheaper next year as airlines say they will finally start passing on some of the savings made on plummeting oil prices. Carriers are forecasting record profits for 2015 thanks to cheaper fuel and rising demand. As a result, they expect to cut the average ticket price by 5 percent in 2015, excluding surcharges and taxes. That may not be a
A Delta Air Lines crew refueled an airplane at JFK Airport in New York. Carriers are forecasting record profits for 2015 thanks to cheaper fuel and rising demand. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

ATLANTA – Delta Air Lines said it forecasts a pretax profit of $5 billion next year, up from a projection of $4.5 billion for 2014, as it expects to save $1.7 billion in fuel costs even after accounting for hedging losses.

"2015 should be a fantastic year," Chief Executive Richard Anderson told investors at a presentation Thursday in New York.

Shares of Atlanta-based Delta rose 4.6 percent to close Thursday at $48.33. The Bloomberg U.S. airlines index closed up 2.6 percent, the sixth gain in seven trading sessions, on a day when crude oil fell to its lowest settlement price since July 2009. Spirit Airlines was the lone carrier in the 11-company gauge to post a decline.

Anderson set the tone for the airline industry's rally by predicting that Delta will return at least $1.5 billion to shareholders next year, raising its forecast for fourth-quarter operating margins and quantifying the benefit from lower bills for jet kerosene. That benefit includes the drag from a $1.2 billion loss on contracts that pegged the price of fuel higher than the market.

Delta is among carriers with the greatest fuel hedges, and analysts have said that could keep it from benefiting as much as its peers from plummeting oil prices. Delta said Thursday it expects to see "full participation" in fuel savings in 2016.

Next year, Delta sees fuel prices at $2.40 to $2.50 a gallon, down from $2.69 to $2.74 a gallon it had projected to pay in this quarter. Jet fuel was at $2.07 a gallon Thursday, having fallen 34 percent this year.

By comparison, Southwest Airlines expects to pay $2.30 to $2.40 a gallon for jet kerosene next year, based on the forward curve and including the effect of hedging, Chief Executive Gary Kelly said Thursday in a speech in New York. At least a portion of its fuel needs are hedged through 2018.

Delta expects fourth-quarter operating margins of 11.5 percent to 12.5 percent, Anderson said. That compared with an October forecast of 10 percent to 12 percent.

In April, the board will consider renewals of its dividend and share buybacks, Delta said.

Anderson and President Ed Bastian reinforced their message that the airline industry has differentiated itself on service in recent years, and Delta expects to be rewarded.

"We are not a commodity," Anderson said. "This is a really difficult business, this is not soybeans, wheat and corn. It's really hard to do this well. And we don't want to be priced at commodity levels."

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