Delta profit rises as fuel costs fall

But revenue from each passenger slips amid competition, overseas issues.

Delta Air Lines, benefiting from low fuel prices, reported a $946 million profit for the first quarter.

Still, Atlanta-based Delta indicated it may cut flights in the fall if it doesn’t see improvement in other areas. The airline said its first quarter revenue was hit by a $5 million impact from the Brussels terrorist attacks and $125 million in foreign currency pressures.

Delta has been attempting to keep revenue — and fares — up, even as fuel costs drop. But passenger unit revenue slipped 4.6 percent in the first quarter from a year ago, amid the global volatility as well as stiffer competition.

In Atlanta, for example, Delta faces increased international competition this spring as Turkish Airlines launches nonstop flights to Istanbul and Qatar Airways launches flights to Doha.

Delta’s incoming president, Glen Hauenstein, said the Atlanta-to-Doha market has fewer than five people a day traveling between the two cities, meaning the rest of the Qatar Airways’ plane would need to be filled with connecting passengers.

“We don’t think they’ll be successful but that is capacity that we face here,” Hauenstein said.

Connecting traffic could increase competition for passengers flying to other destinations in the Middle East and Asia.

A variety of other global challenges have cut into Delta’s revenue. European sales have been weak due to the weaker Euro, the Paris market is recovering since the terrorist attacks there last November, and there has been a “very small impact” on the Latin American market from cancellations due to the Zika virus.

But all in all, Delta has held onto about half of its savings from fuel costs, according to incoming CEO Ed Bastian. Delta CEO Richard Anderson retires May 2, and Bastian will step up to the chief executive position from his current role as president.

Hauenstein said in a written statement that the airline is “focused on getting unit revenues back to a positive trajectory and we will make adjustments to our fall capacity levels if we are not making sufficient progress over the coming months.”

Overall, revenue declined 1 percent to $9.25 billion in the first quarter of the year, which ended March 31. Operating expense declined 3 percent, including a $1.45 billion decline in adjusted fuel expense.

That contributed to an increase in net income to $946 million, from $746 million a year earlier.

The 40 percent decline in market fuel prices helped to lower Delta’s fuel costs. But the airline hada loss of $118 million on fuel hedges — advance contracts to buy fuel at certain prices. The Trainer, Pa., oil refinery Delta bought several years ago had $28 million loss.

Separately, Delta is in the market for narrow-body jets to renew its domestic fleet over the next five years. Among the options, Bastian said, are 737s operated by Delta’s Brazilian partner Gol, as that airline looks to trim its operations.