Close Menu
  • THE SHOW
    • Find Your Local TV Station
    • Videos
      • Featured Segments
      • Destinations
      • Interviews
      • In Case You Missed It
    • The Hosts
      • Bobby Laurie
      • Nikki Noya
      • en Espanol – Juan Albarran
    • Correspondents
      • Jeanenne Tornatore
      • Lisa Niver
    • On Demand Viewing
      • Roku
      • Amazon FireTV
    • Podcast
      • Apple Podcasts
      • Breaker
      • iHeart Radio
      • Pocket Casts
      • Radio Public
      • Spotify
  • FULL EPISODES
  • Travel Insight
  • Inspiration
  • TJS en Español
    • Inicio
    • Aerolíneas de Estados Unidos
    • Destinos
    • Noticias
  • Book Travel
    • Flights
    • Hotels
    • Cruises
      • AmaWaterways
      • Viking Cruises
      • Virgin Voyages
    • All Inclusive Resorts
      • Sandals Resorts
      • Beaches Resorts
    • en Español
      • Guía de viaje

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.
What's Hot

United Airlines CEO Warns Airfare Could Soon Rise Because of the Iran War

Southwest Airlines Under Fire Over Its New Seating Policy

United Airlines Can Now Remove Passengers Who Refuse to Wear Headphones

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook Instagram YouTube TikTok Threads
The Jet Set
  • THE SHOW
    • Find Your Local TV Station
    • Videos
      • Featured Segments
      • Destinations
      • Interviews
      • In Case You Missed It
    • The Hosts
      • Bobby Laurie
      • Nikki Noya
      • en Espanol – Juan Albarran
    • Correspondents
      • Jeanenne Tornatore
      • Lisa Niver
    • On Demand Viewing
      • Roku
      • Amazon FireTV
    • Podcast
      • Apple Podcasts
      • Breaker
      • iHeart Radio
      • Pocket Casts
      • Radio Public
      • Spotify
  • FULL EPISODES
  • Travel Insight
  • Inspiration
  • TJS en Español
    • Inicio
    • Aerolíneas de Estados Unidos
    • Destinos
    • Noticias
  • Book Travel
    • Flights
    • Hotels
    • Cruises
      • AmaWaterways
      • Viking Cruises
      • Virgin Voyages
    • All Inclusive Resorts
      • Sandals Resorts
      • Beaches Resorts
    • en Español
      • Guía de viaje
The Jet Set
Home»Travel»Articles»Travel Insight»Aviation»Southwest, American Earnings Calls Show Both Ends of 737 Max Crisis

Southwest, American Earnings Calls Show Both Ends of 737 Max Crisis

  • Picture of TJS Author TJS Author

Southwest Airlines and American Airlines both reported third-quarter earnings on Thursday, and both showed the opposite ends of the spectrum that is the Boeing 737 Max crisis.

With the aircraft having been grounded since March after a pair of crashes killed 346 people, Southwest nonetheless exceeded Wall Street’s projections despite it would take a $210 million hit from having its 34 737 Max planes parked for more than eight months now.

American, on the other hand, reported a $540 million loss due to the grounding of its 24 737 Max jets.

Adjusted earnings in 2019 will be airlines-airports/737-max-grounding-costs-american-airlines-540m” target=”_blank” rel=”nofollow noopener noreferrer”>no more than $5.50 a share, down from the previous estimate of as much as $6, American said. To be fair, American has been troubled long before the 737 Max issues and has also been dealing with a mechanics union work slowdown during the summer. The carrier said on-time performance in September was the best in almost two years and the improvement has continued into October.

Southwest Airlines reported a 7.2 percent rise in third-quarter profit, helped largely by strong travel demand and higher fares following the 737 Max flight cancellations.

As much as increased fares hurt travelers, Southwest smartly raised prices on other aircraft that flew at or near capacity.

Airlines have been negotiating compensation with Boeing but Southwest said no settlement has yet been reached and the company did not include any settlement amounts in quarterly results.

Southwest has said it will need one to two months after 737 Max regulatory approval to be ready to fly the aircraft again and retrain its pilots. As of now, it is scheduling without the Max until Feb. 8.

This post was published by our news partner: TravelPulse.com | Article Source |

PrevPreviousWindstar Cruises Bolsters Travel Agent Incentives
NextDisney Cruise Line Shares Taste of Magic With Students at University of BahamasNext

United Airlines CEO Warns Airfare Could Soon Rise Because of the Iran War

Southwest Airlines Under Fire Over Its New Seating Policy

United Airlines Can Now Remove Passengers Who Refuse to Wear Headphones

Southwest Airlines Prohibits Employees from Wearing Smart Glasses at Work

Serial Stowaway Arrested Again for Taking Another Free Flight to Milan

LATEST EPISODE

WATCH ON TV

Youtube Amazon Spotify Heart

ABRIR
The Jet Set
Facebook Instagram YouTube Threads TikTok
© 2026 On It Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.