Delta Sees Surge in U.S. Coronavirus Stalling Travel Rebound
Delta Air Lines Inc. says the resurgence of new coronavirus cases and related travel restrictions have stalled a fledgling recovery in U.S. travel demand and prompted the carrier to slash the number of flights it had hoped to return to its schedule next month.
The airline will add back no more than 500 flights in August instead of the 1,000 it had planned. It doesn’t see adding much more through the end of this year.
“Demand growth has largely stalled,” Chief Executive Officer Ed Bastian said in an interview. “The pace of improvement from this point is going to depend on consumers’ confidence in flying.”
He made his comments as Delta on Tuesday reported a record quarterly adjusted loss of $2.8 billion after a coronavirus-driven collapse in demand slashed revenue by 91% in the three months through June.
58,114 in U.S.Most new cases today
-6% Change in MSCI World Index of global stocks since Wuhan lockdown, Jan. 23
-1.106 Change in U.S. treasury bond yield since Wuhan lockdown, Jan. 23
4.4% Global GDP Tracker (annualized), June