Mon, May 28, 2012, 1:52 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Airlines cite high fuel costs as they raise fares

Airlines are raising fares again, tapping passengers to cover the high cost of fuel

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SymbolPriceChange
JBLU4.750.15
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LCC12.300.14

DALLAS (AP) -- According to fare trackers, JetBlue Airways and Southwest Airlines are leading a round of price increases that will boost the base fare on many medium-length and long flights by $10 per round trip.

United, Delta, American and US Airways said Thursday that they had matched the increases.

J.P. Morgan analyst Jamie Baker, who tracks fares, said United and US Airways expanded the price increases to routes that Southwest doesn't fly and included Denver, where Southwest had not raised prices. Rick Seaney, CEO of FareCompare.com, said at midday Thursday that all the largest U.S. airlines had raised fares.

Baker and Seaney said JetBlue took price increases that other airlines limited to a few markets such as Florida and expanded them nationwide last week. Southwest jumped in on Wednesday, they said.

JetBlue spokeswoman Alison Croyle said the airline raised prices by $5 each way on some Florida and West Coast routes last week and expanded the increase to other routes Sunday. Southwest spokeswoman Ashley Dillon said her airline raised prices to match JetBlue and "cover operating costs including the high price of jet fuel."

Jet fuel accounts for about one-third of an airline's costs — about the same as labor — and the bill has been rising along with crude oil prices. This week, the spot price for Gulf Coast jet fuel was 12.1 percent higher than a year ago and up 8.5 percent so far in 2012, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That could mean more fare hikes ahead.

"It is pretty clear airlines will continue to try to recoup fuel increases regularly this year, with passengers telling carriers exactly when the price of middle seats has stepped over the line," said Seaney.

Airlines raised base fares about a dozen times in 2011. But at the same time, they sacrificed revenue by simultaneously running sales to fill seats during slower travel periods or in specific markets. This week, even as it raised base fares, American launched a sale on Miami flights. Many consumers are savvy enough to wait for sales before buying tickets.

As a result of this yo-yo pricing, average fares don't rise as fast as the number of increases would suggest. The average fare on Southwest, one of the few airlines that discloses such figures, was $140 in late 2011, up 7 percent from a year earlier.

Southwest carries more U.S. passengers than any airline and heavily influences prices that competitors charge on many routes.

In some cases, including several times late last year, other airlines attempted to raise prices but gave up when Southwest refused to go along. Airlines are reluctant to set prices higher than competitors, because many consumers will switch carriers to save just a few dollars.

At times Southwest has hinted that in a weak economy, price increases might drive away customers. But chief financial officer Laura Wright told investors two weeks ago that demand was holding up despite many recent fare increases, including eight last year.

Traffic on some airlines, including industry leader United, fell in January compared with the same month last year. Others, including American, saw more traffic.

Thanks to fare increases, all the major airlines that reported figures said they earned more revenue for every seat flown one mile. That's a closely watched measure of pricing power in the airline business.

___

Follow David Koenig at http://www.twitter.com/airlinewriter

 

69 comments

  • cecebe_ont  •  Alexander City, Alabama  •  3 months ago
    Flying is becoming more of a luxuary these days. With the projected increase in fuel prices for passenger vehicles by summer time, I would expect airline ticket prices to increase even more, therefore further reducing ones desire to travel.Does this mean another round of bankruptcies in the future for the airline industry?
    • bill 3 months ago
      Tired of bending over my friend then fight back it,s your best chance this Memorial Day Weekend for 3 full days any real hard working Americans won,t purchace any gasoline or diesel fuel. It,s NATIONAL SHOVE THAT GAS DAY. Americans stand up together for once and say $1.75 a gallon is the max I will pay.If you don,t like it then we want vehicles built that run on American Natural Gas.Pass On The Word.
    • xtra 3 months ago
      whats this hydrogen generator they corner station is trying to manufacture..? for 125 bucks..?
  • Noway  •  Bemidji, Minnesota  •  3 months ago
    But didn't the government issue a PPI report showing that core inflation was 0.4% but that adding in energy dropped the overall rate to 0.1%?
  • Robert USA  •  3 months ago
    "If this continues, people will have to find another way to fly!”
    • David 3 months ago
      Yep. It's called "driving".
  • Michael  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    High Fuel Costs??? When the cost of fuel was high under the Bush Admin the mainstream media was reporting the high fuel costs on a daily basis. If the cost of fuel is rising, why have we not also had daily coverage on the rising cost of fuel from the same media???
    • reader 3 months ago
      Because the story had run out of fuel!
    • bill 3 months ago
      Thisa Memorial Day 3 day Weekend is Americans last chance to fight back and not buy a gallon of fuel and shove it up Wall Street and Big Oils you know whats and stand as one DEMANDING FAIR GASOLINE PRICES OF $1.75 not a penny more or we want cars that run on Natural Gas built and the USA economy to come back strong.
    • xtra 3 months ago
      i stopped buying at 1.59 a gallon thinking i was being ripped off
  • Jl  •  3 months ago
    Just don't use their services and you will see how quickly the fares come back down.
  • Paul  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    8 years of Bush - Gas prices up 25%
    8 years of Clinton - Gas prices up 38%
    3 years of Obama - Gas prices up 89.4%
  • Old Dad  •  Thousand Oaks, California  •  3 months ago
    Why according to the government we don't have inflation (sarcasm)...
    • Sisafitz 3 months ago
      Actually, that's correct. Federal spending growth exceeds 100% of the cash Bernanke printed during the Obama administration [along with QE gimmickry]. We SHOULD have inflation, but a deflationary cycle is imprinted on our [credit based] economy by runaway government spending and new banking regulations that has the market defying gravity.
  • Jimmie  •  3 months ago
    It's still cheap to fly on Air Force One.
    America just needs to get its priorities right.
    • Sisafitz 3 months ago
      What is that... $340k per hour?
  • Tom  •  Mountain Top, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    In 1982, I took my first trip abroad and paid nearly $700 to fly from New York to London. Just for giggles, I just priced that same round trip: $750 on expedia. For those of you that are under the illusion that air travel has become so expensive, GET A GRIP.
  • James  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    So glad I don't fly anymore, F the airlines.
  • adubw  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    The price of fuel isn't rising in terms of gold(the only real currency), the dollar is weakening...but Obama's massaged inflation figures ignore this.
  • Stupid Monkey  •  Fayetteville, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    We have got to get fuel costs out of the hands of SPECULATORS !!
  • Ken  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    This is why I don't fly anymore and certainly nothing but Southwest with no baggage fees!
  • TravisH  •  Roanoke, Texas  •  3 months ago
    The airlines is one of the biggest scamers besides the banking system in corporate america. Sure fuel cost is going up, but how many times do they tell that they are already making billions of dollars from the added fees they charge for what some people would say is part of the service of their business. I'm a preety high level frequent flier of United so I don't pay these fees, but United and other airlines are bottom feeders, they entice you with all these perks and then so many people take them up on their offer and a few years later they pull the rug right from underneath you. All they need to do is add all the planes they have sitting in storage and all the prices would go down, because they'd have empty seats, its alll about the supply and demand. The problem is corporate america needss the airlines more then ever and they pay whatever the fares are and that's how they get away with the non-business traveler gets screwed on pricing.
  • Paul  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    inflation is low if you exclude everything that has gone up. However I will count all rising prices as growth in the economy
  • MD  •  Dayton, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    So much for my Hawaiian vac! Thanks big oil!
  • Mr. Toby  •  3 months ago
    This is news, they have been raising ticket price in relation to the cost of fuel for 30 + years that I know of.......Now if the Gubernment would take some of the tax off of fuel it would help the airlines but the GUbernment would have to down size and we know that AIN'T going to happen....
  • Norman  •  3 months ago
    Thank goodness......other than rising food costs (look at your receipts from a year ago), gasoline and oil costs,tires, utility bills, service company calls (HVAC-check on R-22 home freon-contractors cost went up 250% in one week--It'll be passed on to you THIS summer, plumbing, electrical), materials for the house, health care premiums, daycare, airline fees and tickets, tax breaks vanished this year (work income credit; $400 single, $800 married) and just about everything you have bought recently........there is no noticable inflation going on.............
  • Dennis  •  3 months ago
    Like other businesses, I'm sure that when their costs increase, they will add a certain percentage on top of that. Just makes good business cents!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Stupid Monkey  •  Fayetteville, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    Strange how high fuel prices do not seem to be slowing the Obama family vacation tour at all !! I want the job as there vacation planner !!
 
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