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Where are low-cost airlines cutting back now? New planes
  + stars: | 2024-08-30 | by ( Leslie Josephs | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
In this article SAVEULCCJBLU Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTJetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines and United Airlines airplanes proceed to gates after landing at Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey on May 30, 2024. Airlines flooded the U.S. with flights this year, driving down fares particularly in the domestic market, where low-cost carriers concentrate, and weighing on carriers' revenue while costs have gone up. Spirit Airlines , JetBlue Airways and Frontier Airlines last posted annual profits in 2019, while larger carriers have returned to profitability. Now, some of those same airlines are dialing back their growth plans and deferring deliveries of new aircraft. Some airlines, like Frontier, have been active in sale-leasebacks, in which they sell planes to generate cash and lease them back.
Persons: Gary Hershorn, Cash, Barry Biffle, Biffle, Joanna Geraghty, , AerCap, Gus Kelly, Eddy Pieniazek, Pieniazek, Alwyn Scott Organizations: JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, United Airlines, Newark Liberty International Airport, Corbis, Getty Images Airlines, Frontier Airlines, roundtrip U.S, Airbus, New York, Pratt & Whitney, JetBlue, Airlines, Aircraft, Boeing, Max, Air Lease Locations: Newark , New Jersey, U.S, Mobile , Alabama
REUTERS/John Sommers II/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsAug 18 (Reuters) - Air cargo enjoyed record demand when COVID-19 closed borders and snarled supply chains. Now, it is reeling from overcapacity and tumbling freight rates as the freight boom makes a hard landing. Passenger jets grounded during the health crisis are flying again and bringing their lower-deck cargo space, which competes with dedicated air freighters, back into play. The Florida-based carrier cited "the unyielding and rapidly mounting macro-economic headwinds that plagued the entire air cargo transportation sector starting in late 2022". In June, air cargo experienced the slowest contraction since February 2022, the International Air Transport Association said.
Persons: John Sommers, Xeneta, they're, Peter Sand, we're, Sand, planemakers, Eddy Pieniazek, expective, Pieniazek, Robert, Tim Hepher, Lisa Bartlein, Allison Lampert, Valerie Insinna, Barbara Lewis Organizations: Parcel Service, UPS, REUTERS, Air, Reuters, Western Global Airlines, Japan Airlines, Xeneta, International Air Transport Association, Ishka, Cathay, HK, Boeing, Airbus, Aeronautical Engineers, Thomson Locations: Louisville , Kentucky, Delaware, Florida, China, Asia, United States, Miami
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