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Delta Air Lines First-Quarter Results Top Views; Sees Fuel Expense Increase of Over $2 Billion

-- Delta Air Lines (DAL) on Wednesday reported better-than-expected first-quarter results amid robust corporate and leisure demand, although the carrier flagged a fuel expense increase of more than $2 billion in the current three-month period due to the Middle East war.

The company posted adjusted earnings of $0.64 a share for the March quarter, up from $0.45 the year before, topping the FactSet-polled consensus of $0.58. Operating revenue climbed 13% to $15.85 billion. Total passenger revenue gained by 7% while cargo inclined 9%.

"We delivered earnings that were more than 40% higher than last year, even with a significant increase in fuel costs and operational disruptions across the industry," Chief Executive Ed Bastian said in a statement. The stock jumped 12% in the most recent premarket activity.

Operating revenue improved 9.4% to $14.2 billion on an adjusted basis in the first quarter, ahead of the average analyst estimate for $14.05 billion. The metric grew amid "broad demand strength across corporate and leisure," Chief Commercial Officer Joe Esposito said. Adjusted total revenue per available seat mile grew 8.2% on a yearly basis, with gains across all regions.

The airline is taking measures to protect its margins and cash flow, including "meaningfully reducing capacity growth with a downward bias until the fuel environment improves, and moving quickly to recapture higher fuel costs," Bastian said.

The US and Iran on Tuesday agreed to a two-week ceasefire, having been in a military conflict since the end of February. The war spread across the Middle East and curtailed shipments through the crucial Strait of Hormuz, driving up energy prices.

For the ongoing quarter, Delta anticipates fuel at the forward curve as of April 2, resulting in a projected all-in price of about $4.30 per gallon, pushing fuel costs up by more than $2 billion. In the previous quarter, adjusted fuel price increased 7% year over year to $2.62 per gallon.

Adjusted EPS is pegged at $1 to $1.50 for the second quarter on low-teens revenue growth, according to Delta. The Street is looking for non-GAAP EPS of $1.56 and revenue of $17.21 billion. Capacity is expected to be flat year over year amid the airline's capacity reduction and fuel recapture efforts, Esposito said.

"In the June quarter, we expect to lead the industry with $1 billion of profit," according to Bastian. "And while the recent fuel spike is currently impacting earnings, I'm confident this environment ultimately reinforces Delta's leadership and accelerates long-term earnings power."

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