WRAPUP 1-Global airlines hike fares, cut routes as fuel costs balloon

Reuters00:48
WRAPUP 1-Global airlines hike fares, cut routes as fuel costs balloon

Airlines face soaring costs due to US-Israeli war against Iran

Delta says jet fuel adds $400 million in costs in March alone

Conflict disrupts global aviation, affects routes and operations

SAS among first airline to cut routes due to soaring fuel costs

By Rajesh Kumar Singh, Shivansh Tiwary and Joanna Plucinska

March 17 (Reuters) - Global airlines sounded the alarm on Tuesday over soaring jet fuel prices triggered by the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran, warning of hundreds of millions of extra costs, higher fares and cuts to some routes.

Delta Air Lines DAL.N Chief Executive Ed Bastian said the dramatic run-up in jet fuel prices had increased the airline's costs by as much as $400 million in March alone. The industry is moving quickly to pass on higher expenses through fare hikes, he told a J.P. Morgan industrials conference.

American Airlines AAL.O said it expects a $400 million increase in first-quarter expenses due to fuel costs.

Among the first to act, Scandinavia's biggest airline SAS AB said it is cutting a limited number of flights because of the "sharp and sudden increase" in fuel prices.

"The entire European aviation system is now feeling the pressure from a sudden fuel shock," it said in an email.

MAJOR CHALLENGE

The war, now in its third week, has thrown global aviation into turmoil, with flights cancelled, rescheduled or rerouted as most Middle East airspace remains closed amid fears of missile and drone attacks.

Jet fuel prices have emerged as a major challenge, pushing up operating costs, with European prices JET-C-NWE doubling and Asian prices JETSGSWMc1 up almost 80% since the start of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran in late February.

Fuel is the industry's second-largest expense after labour, typically accounting for a fifth to a quarter of operating costs. U.S. airlines largely stopped hedging fuel in the past two decades, and SAS said last year it had not hedged any of its fuel consumption for the following 12 months.

Vietnamese authorities have warned the country's aviation industry to prepare for potential flight reductions from April after China and Thailand halted jet fuel exports due to the war, heightening the risk of shortages.

SHOCKWAVES THROUGH THE INDUSTRY

The United Arab Emirates briefly closed its airspace on Tuesday in response to incoming missile and drone threats from Iran, the second straight day of disruption after a drone caused a fire near Dubai airport on Monday.

About 86,000 passengers travelling through Frankfurt airport, one of Europe's largest, were affected by cancellations in the first two weeks of the war. Only one-third of weekly connections between the airport and the Middle East are operating now, CEO Stefan Schulte said on Tuesday.

The mounting cost warnings show how the shockwaves from the conflict are spreading far beyond the Middle East as airlines navigate their biggest crisis since the COVID pandemic.

Delta's Bastian said the carrier is well positioned to recover fuel costs and can adjust capacity if elevated prices persist. Still, airlines will need to tread carefully with fare hikes at a time of fragile consumer confidence.

Air France-KLM AIRF.PA announced plans last week to increase long-haul ticket prices to offset surging fuel costs.

Some carriers have introduced fuel surcharges, but these risk eroding profits.

American Airlines said on Tuesday its first-quarter revenue is now expected to rise more than 10%, above its previous forecast of 7% to 10%, as demand outperformed expectations. But its adjusted loss per share will now be towards the lower end of its earlier guidance range of 10 cents to 50 cents.

Iran Conflict: UAE Flights https://reut.rs/3N0l0s6

Jet fuel prices in Asia and Europe have soared since start of Iran air war https://reut.rs/40xPNzF

(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh in Chicago, Shivansh Tiwary in Bengaluru and Joanna Plucinska in London. Additional reporting by Enas Alashray and Federico Maccioni in Dubai. Writing by Josephine Mason. Editing by Mark Potter)

((Enas.Alashray@thomsonreuters.com;))

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