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Major U.S. airlines see $10 billion loss in 2008

Tue Jun 17, 2008 5:13pm EDT

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The exhaust from the engines of a commercial aircraft create the illusion of a solar flare as it flies in front of the sun in Wilmington, Delaware, May 18, 2007. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer

By John Crawley

Bonds  |  Global Markets

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. airlines projected on Tuesday they could lose $10 billion in 2008 due to skyrocketing fuel costs, a sum that would almost match the industry's worst-ever year loss in 2002.

James May of the Air Transport Association also told a joint U.S. Senate hearing on speculative trading in the oil markets that up to 200 communities could lose airline service as a result of carrier capacity cuts that are being imposed to save money.

"This nation's economy is inextricably linked to the viability of its air transportation system. If the airlines continue to spiral downward, so will the economy," May said.

Wall Street analysts also are predicting multibillion-dollar losses for big airlines that are spending 50 percent more on fuel this year. Total fuel costs are expected to top $61 billion, the largest expense for airlines.

Shares of U.S. airlines moved broadly higher on Tuesday as global crude prices slipped from record highs. However, shares of United Airlines, a unit of UAL Corp (UAUA.O), were off 2.6 percent to $7 after the company projected its 2008 fuel bill would hit $9.5 billion.

United's disclosure was made as part of May's push in Congress for tougher regulation of oil futures trading. Airlines believe market manipulation and speculation are behind the record run-up in global crude prices although the Bush administration believes recent price spikes are due mainly to supply and demand.

May said quick legislative and regulatory action is needed to maintain a viable airline industry.

"We are asking for Congress to take steps now to totally close the loopholes and make the market more transparent and balanced, to ensure a level playing field for all," May said.

Lawmakers also have pushed for tighter oversight. U.S. oil futures regulators said on Tuesday they are moving to impose more limits on overseas trading.

Some Wall Street analysts believe the current airline downturn could be worse than the one that triggered bankruptcies at four major carriers between 2002-07.

Carriers are scrambling to slash capacity and find new revenue through fees for checked luggage and other extras that used to be rolled into the cost of a ticket.

Higher industry fuel costs are a major industrywide problem. But revenues also are beginning to raise concern with pressure on airlines to boost them significantly to offset higher costs.

Lehman Brothers analyst Gary Chase believes "cracks are forming" in the airline industry revenue picture but remains cautious about the overall outlook and does not believe there has been a "sudden weakening" of revenue across-the-board that is "typical of airline downturns."

Amex airline index .XAL was up almost 1.39 percent.

Some carriers, including US Airways Group Inc (LCC.N) and low-cost carrier AirTran Holdings Inc (AAI.N), have reported weaker than expected second quarter revenue guidance while others, like JetBlue Airways Corp (JBLU.O) and Continental Airlines Inc (CAL.N), are doing better.

AirTran shares fell 5 percent on Tuesday to $2.53.

(Reporting by John Crawley; editing by Carol Bishopric)



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