Delta Air Lines is earning half the industry’s profit, with a 13.6% operating margin and $1.3 billion in earnings for the last quarter. Despite these figures, both are down year-over-year, and the airline has lowered its guidance for the third quarter. Following Thursday morning's announcement, Delta's stock initially lost 8% of its value but regained half by the end of the trading day.
The airline attributes its performance issues to excessive capacity in the market, suggesting that other airlines are responsible for this oversupply. Delta President Glen Hauenstein stated, "Domestic industry seat growth accelerated into the summer months beyond normal demand growth. This has impacted Main Cabin unit revenue trends through the summer." He added that with scheduled seat growth decelerating into fall, they expect unit revenue trends to improve significantly in August and beyond.
Aviation analytics company Cirium reports that domestic market seats are up 6% year-over-year, while Delta's seats increased by 5%. Across the Atlantic, Delta’s seat growth was also 5%, surpassing United Airlines and British Airways. Air France led this growth at 9%.