UAL Corporation posts
FeedPosted Jul 20th 2010 11:00AM by Wade Hansen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, UAL Corp (UAUA), Stocks to Buy
I hope your seat belt is fastened and your tray table is in its full upright position because the parent company of United Airlines -- UAL Corporation (UAUA) -- is ready for take off.
Thanks to a 27% jump in passenger revenue per available seat mile, United just posted its first quarterly profit in three years and its highest quarterly profit in 11 years. The company reported net profit of $430 million, or $1.95 per share -- well above the consensus estimate of $1.77 per share.
Business is looking particularly good in the Pacific and Latin America regions where the company saw growth rates of 52% and 63%, respectively
Continue reading United Airlines is Ready for Take Off
Posted Oct 21st 2009 10:00AM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, UAL Corp (UAUA)

The skies are starting to look a little friendlier to
United Airlines (NASDAQ:
UAUA).
The airline reported a quarterly loss that was lower than expected. Third quarter traffic was off only 2.9%, but because United used discounts to fill seats, revenue fell 20.3% (to $4.43 billion). The key to a recovery will be getting passengers to shell out for more expensive seats. According to United's president, John Tague, "There's no opportunity here for a full revenue recovery until we get premium cabin pricing back." He doesn't know how long this is going to take, but does say that he's seen progress over the past few months.
Nonetheless, it's important not to confuse "not so bad" with "making money." UAL lost $57 million (39 cents a share) last quarter. If it hadn't had some good news on fuel hedges and accounting issues, the loss would have been 43 cents a share. Again, this is better than analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected: they were forecasting a loss of 94 cents per share. And, the third quarter loss was much better than last year's $792 million for the third quarter.
But, it all comes down to the bottom line, and a loss is a loss is a loss.
Continue reading UAL has almost good news for third quarter
Posted Sep 17th 2009 5:00PM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Southwest Airlines (LUV), AMR Corp (AMR), UAL Corp (UAUA), Delta Air Lines (DAL)
United Airlines (NASDAQ: UAUA), US Airways (NYSE: LCC) and American Airlines (NYSE: AMR), according to an influential analyst, have run out of options. Jamie Baker of JPMorgan said in a July 20, 2009 report that these companies couldn't do anything to prevent a cash crisis. They only savior available to them would have to be an outside investor. To call the position grim would be optimistic. Unfortunately, it couldn't have come at a worse time.
As Baker was walking the bear into the airline industry, United was starting to celebrate its change in direction. The carrier has improved its on-time rate, according to a USA Today report, and its operations are coming around. Despite the fact that the airline industry has been brutalized by the global recession, the airline has made some progress. Through August, the company's share price doubled, and its ascent has continued in September. So, the company is locked in an ongoing struggle to manage its identity, cope with its past and shape how the world sees it today.
The operational "makeover" has resulted in a reduction of its fleet from 601 jets in 2000 to 386 as of the summer of 2009. In terms of passenger traffic, it's in the #4 spot in the United States – trailing Delta (NYSE: DAL), Southwest (NYSE: LUV) and American. With Q2 revenues off 25.2% year-over-year, however, drastic measures are still necessary.
Continue reading United's battle over its identity
Posted Jun 4th 2008 8:10AM by Laurie Pasternack (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, Procter and Gamble (PG), UAL Corp (UAUA),
MAJOR PAPERS:
- In a move to help cut expenses and save on fuel prices, UAL Corporation (NASDAQ: UAUA), parent of United Airlines, will reduce its 460 airplane fleet by 70 jets. Not yet known is how may jobs will be affected, the Wall Street Journal reported.
- In an all stock deal, J.M. Smucker Co. (NYSE: SJM) is expected to buy Folgers coffee from The Proctor & Gamble Company (NYSE: PG) for an estimated $2B, according to the Wall Street Journal. Folgers, the best selling ground coffee in the U.S., has annual sales of about $1.6B.
- The Financial Times reported that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc (NYSE: LEH) lost $500M-$700M on some of its hedging positions in Q2, which have contributed to a larger than expected loss that could result in the bank raising more capital by selling a stake to an outside investor. Lehman has begun negotiations with potential investors, including asset managers and Asian banks, sources said.
OTHER PAPERS:
- According to sources, the Rocky Mountain News reported that troubled home builder Beazer Homes USA Inc (NYSE: BZH) is pulling out of Colorado. Beazer, which is being investigated for mortgage fraud by several government agencies, has built homes in the suburbs of Denver and in Colorado Springs.
Posted May 29th 2008 8:00AM by Laurie Pasternack (RSS feed)
Filed under: Newspapers, Magazines, US Airways Group (LCC), UAL Corp (UAUA), Barclays plc ADS (BCS)
MAJOR PAPERS:
- H.J. Heinz Co. (NYSE: HNZ) is today expected to increase its sales and profit projections for the next two years, as it reports results of its fiscal year ended April 30. The Wall Street Journal reported that sales are to grow 6% or higher from 4%, while earnings per share growth for the next two years is projected to grow between 8% and 11% from the earlier projection of 7% to 9%.
- It appears that Vistaprint Limited (NASDAQ: VPRT), a graphic design services and printed products company, counts on referral fees from pop up rewards programs on it website for a certain amount of its revenue and profit and also relies on the referral of its customers to outside firms offering rewards programs, which turns out to be a monthly fee for services such as discounts on movies and amusement parks, according to the Wall Street Journal's "Heard on the Street". Some believe the stock, whose shares have plummeted over concerns of slowing revenue and slimmer gross margins, may be trading too high for its own good.
- According to people familiar with their plans, the Financial Times reported that the CEOs of UAL Corporation's (NASDAQ: UAUA) United Airlines and US Airways Group (NYSE: LCC) will today meet to discuss the carriers' potential merger agreement.
OTHER PAPERS:
- The Independent reported that for the second time this month, Barclays Plc (NYSE: BCS) revised lower its calculation of analysts' consensus for its full-year profit, cutting its 2008 figure by nearly 8% to GBP5.876B pre-tax; Barclays cut the calculation 15% two weeks ago.
Posted May 8th 2007 11:10AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Industry, UAL Corp (UAUA), Bargain Stocks
.gif)
Airlines stocks are entering the seasonally strongest period, after having a pretty good correction. It looks like a good trading opportunity.
One stock we have blogged about in the past with good success has been
UAL Corporation (NASDAQ:
UAUA). UAL has had a serious correction, dropping from a January 2007 high of $50 and is now around $35.50.
What is attractive about UAL is that it has a strong franchise name and a boat load of cash and little debt. Finishing up the first quarter with $4.2 billion and just $1.2 billion in balance-sheet debt.
Operating cash flow increased by 38% from the first quarter of 2006 to approximately $626 million.
While there are some capacity issues for the most recent quarter, buying a stock with $4.2 billion in cash, balance-sheet debt of $1.2 billion and generating $626 million in OCF, is just too cheap to pass up. Look for United to revisit its $50 higher.