Korean Air first quarter profit hit by maintenance costs
April 14, 2025
Korean Air reported a 19% fall in unconsolidated operating profit for the quarter ended 31 March to W351 billion ($239 million) as maintenance costs and other operating costs overshadowed stronger performance from its passenger business. The SkyTeam carrier's revenue rose 3% to W3.96 trillion, led by a 4% rise in passenger revenue to W12.44 trillion. ASKs in the quarter increased 2.4%, which was outpaced by a 4.3% rise in RPKs that pushed load factors up 1.6 percentage points to 84.9%. Nonetheless, yield slipped by 0.3%, "Despite heightened competition from increased market capacity and various domestic and international uncertainties, strong travel demand during the Lunar New Year and March holiday period supported both revenue and traffic growth," the airline says. Cargo revenue grew 6% to W1.05 trillion as Korean Air implemented "agile capacity adjustments and strategic efforts to secure stable, long-term demand from key clients". Although fuel costs fell in the quarter, that was offset by higher labour, handling and depreciation charges. Net profit for the quarter fell 44% to W193 billion, dragged down by currency losses and other non-operating items. In its outlook, Korean Air says it expects demand to grow as the passenger business heads into the peak season, aided by strong outbound demand from Korea, Southeast Asia, China and Japan. On the cargo front, however, it notes that demand and market volatility are set to "intensify as the US imposes reciprocal tariffs", which it aims to negate by operating flexible routes and developing new shipper relationships.
Ground tests delay Wizz Air's first A321XLR delivery
April 14, 2025
Airbus's planned first A321XLR delivery to Wizz Air has been postponed because the aircraft requires additional tests. The European airframer had made preparations for a handover of the aircraft from its German assembly line to the low-cost carrier in Hamburg on 10 April. "Further tests are needed following the initial ground tests," Airbus says. "These further ground tests will take a few more days to complete," the manufacturer adds, noting: "Our tests are rigorous and there is nothing unusual about this process." Wizz Air is scheduled to become the third A321XLR operator after Iberia and Aer Lingus, and the first to receive the aircraft with Pratt & Whitney PW1100G engines. The two IAG carriers opted for CFM International Leap-1A powerplants. Launch operator Iberia began scheduled passenger flights with the A321XLR in November 2024 and today has three of the type, fleets data shows. Aer Lingus took delivery of two A321XLRs in December. The PW1100G-powered variant was certificated in February. Wizz Air has 299 A321neos on order, including 47 A321XLRs, the data shows. Iberia meanwhile says that it will begin flights with A321XLRs to Washington DC on 12 April, its second transatlantic destination for the type after Boston.
Frontier cuts capacity and pulls guidance, citing weaker demand
April 14, 2025
Frontier Airlines has reduced its second-quarter capacity, withdrawn full-year guidance and warned of a first-quarter loss, citing an “uncertain” and “weakened demand environment”. The US carrier’s parent company, Frontier Group, says in a 10 April filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that revenue growth in the first quarter is anticipated to be lower than expected due to weaker demand in March. In response to a “weakened demand environment”, Frontier has cut scheduled capacity in the second quarter by a “low single digit” amount, compared with the same period last year. The Denver-based airline says it will “closely monitor the demand environment and make any further adjustments to capacity and related costs, as appropriate”. Frontier expects to report a net loss in the first quarter, which it says will result in a loss per share of between 20 cents and 24 cents. It adds that it is unable to reaffirm full-year guidance for 2025 “due to the uncertain environment”, having previously forecast adjusted earnings per share for 2025 of “at least” $1. This follows an announcement from Delta Air Lines earlier this month that it does not expect to raise capacity in the second quarter because of “broad economic uncertainty around global trade”. The US major said that growth had “largely stalled”, and did not provide any updated guidance for the full year. The US government has announced that it will bring in a range of steep tariffs on imported goods from other countries. The changing nature of those tariffs and the planned introduction of countermeasures by other countries have created uncertainty in global markets. Frontier will release its first-quarter financial results on 1 May.