NYTimes.com Article: Three Airlines Increase Fares to Help Cope With Fuel Prices

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Three Airlines Increase Fares to Help Cope With Fuel Prices

February 15, 2003
By EDWARD WONG






Three leading airlines increased nearly all their fares by
$10 each way yesterday.

The move, the most significant attempt at a fare increase
since last summer, was an effort to re-establish pricing
power as fares have hit record lows. But several industry
experts raised doubts that the airlines would be able to
keep the higher fares. With the possibility of a war,
travel has continued to slump, they say, and the situation
will only worsen if the United States attacks Iraq.

The three carriers - Continental Airlines, American
Airlines and US Airways - will also have to see whether
their top rivals decide to match the increase. If those
carriers - Delta Air Lines, Northwest Airlines and United
Airlines - do not raise their fares, then the three will
probably have to back down.

People in the industry are watching Northwest in
particular, because it did not go along with several fare
increases last year, forcing its rivals to return to lower
fares.

Continental, the country's fifth-largest carrier, was the
first to put the fare increase into effect yesterday
morning .

"Although the airline industry is suffering from
overcapacity and weak demand, this fare increase is
necessary to get Continental back on the path to financial
recovery," the company said.

Continental said the increase was necessary to help offset
"dramatically higher fuel expenses."

American soon matched the increase, and US Airways acted by
late afternoon, according to Terry Trippler, an air fare
expert who works for CheapSeats.com.

Fuel is the second-highest expense for airlines, behind
labor costs. In the last year, fuel prices have spiked
because of the labor strife in Venezuela and tensions with
Iraq, said John Heimlich, an economist for the Air
Transport Association, the industry's main trade group. All
the big airlines have a certain amount of their fuel hedged
in case the price of oil goes up, but they have not been
able to avoid paying higher prices on average.

The spot price for a gallon of jet fuel is now $1.20, more
than double the 57 cents it was a year ago, according to
the trade group. The price for West Texas intermediate
crude oil is expected to be $34.25 a barrel this month,
compared with $20.65 a year ago.

In December, airlines paid an average of 77.4 cents a
gallon for fuel, up from 60.1 cents in December 2001.

The cost of crude oil, and thus jet fuel, will almost
certainly go up if there is a war in Iraq.

Even so, there is no guarantee the fare increase will
stick, experts said. That will depend on the market
conditions for air travel, which are dismal right now.
Furthermore, they said, carriers with relatively good cash
reserves - Northwest, for instance - can better afford to
keep fares lower than some of their competitors.

"The airline industry needs it," Michael Boyd, an airline
consultant based in Evergreen, Colo., said of the price
increase. "Whether it'll stick is another issue. With war
jitters out there and other things, I don't know whether
it'll stick."

Just after Christmas, US Airways tried adding a fuel
surcharge of $10 each way on round-trip fares. American
soon matched the increase, but the two carriers retracted
their moves before the end of the year. Frontier Airlines,
the low-cost carrier, tried adding a $5 surcharge each way
around the same time, but eliminated the increase before
the end of January.


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/15/business/15AIR.html?ex=1046324647&ei=1&en=ccb591ff8e3727cd



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