Continental demand rises in February
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HOUSTON, March 1, 2010 - Continental Airlines (NYSE: CAL) today reported a February consolidated (mainline plus regional) load factor of 77.7 percent, 5.2 points above the February 2009 consolidated load factor, and a mainline load factor of 78.1 percent, 5.2 points above the February 2009 mainline load factor. Both February load factors were records for the month. The carrier reported a domestic mainline February load factor of 80.6 percent, 2.9 points above the February 2009 domestic mainline load factor, and a record international mainline load factor of 75.9 percent, 7.5 points above February 2009.
During February, Continental recorded a U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) on-time arrival rate of 75.0 percent and a mainline segment completion factor of 95.4 percent. Continental’s operational results were adversely impacted by severe winter weather, particularly at its New York hub at Newark Liberty International Airport.
In February 2010, Continental flew 6.1 billion consolidated revenue passenger miles (RPMs) and 7.8 billion consolidated available seat miles (ASMs), resulting in a consolidated traffic increase of 3.3 percent and a capacity decrease of 3.8 percent as compared to February 2009. In February 2010, Continental flew 5.4 billion mainline RPMs and 6.9 billion mainline ASMs, resulting in a mainline traffic increase of 3.2 percent and a mainline capacity decrease of 3.7 percent as compared to February 2009. Domestic mainline traffic was 2.7 billion RPMs in February 2010, down 0.5 percent from February 2009, and domestic mainline capacity was 3.3 billion ASMs, down 4.1 percent from February 2009.
For February 2010, consolidated passenger revenue per available seat mile (RASM) is estimated to have increased between 7.5 and 8.5 percent compared to February 2009, while mainline RASM is estimated to have increased between 5.5 and 6.5 percent. Continental estimates that the suspension of operations at its New York hub on February 10,
2010, and February 26, 2010, due to severe winter weather in the New York area reduced its consolidated passenger revenue for the month by approximately $25 million. The combination of available seat mile reductions caused by the two February snowstorms and the company’s re-accommodation of many customers who were impacted by its flight cancellations resulted in a year-over-year RASM benefit of approximately one percentage point, compared to the year-over-year RASM performance the company would have expected had the company flown the capacity it cancelled as a result of the storms.
For January 2010, consolidated passenger RASM decreased 1.3 percent compared to January 2009, while mainline passenger RASM decreased 2.8 percent compared to January 2009.
Continental’s regional operations had a February load factor of 74.6 percent, 5.3 points above the February 2009 regional load factor. Regional RPMs were 657.0 million and regional ASMs were 880.2 million in February 2010, resulting in a traffic increase of 3.5 percent and a capacity decrease of 4.0 percent versus February 2009.
Continental Airlines is the world’s fifth largest airline. Continental, together with Continental Express and Continental Connection, has more than 2,500 daily departures throughout the Americas, Europe and Asia, serving 133 domestic and 135 international destinations. Continental is a member of Star Alliance, which overall offers 19,700 daily flights to 1,077 airports in 175 countries through its 26 member airlines. With more than 41,000 employees, Continental has hubs serving New York, Houston, Cleveland and Guam, and together with its regional partners, carries approximately 63 million passengers per year.
Continental consistently earns awards and critical acclaim for both its operation and its corporate culture. For the sixth consecutive year, FORTUNE magazine named Continental the No. 1 World’s Most Admired Airline on its 2009 list of World’s Most Admired Companies. For more company information, go to continental.com.
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