Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "United Airlines —"


25 mentions found


Cisco Systems — The networking technology stock added nearly 2% on the heels of a Citi upgrade to buy from neutral. The firm's earnings came in at $1.88 per share, versus the $1.58 expected by a LSEG analyst poll. Revenue was $15.38 billion versus the $14.41 billion consensus estimate. United also announced a $1.5 billion share buyback, its first since before the pandemic. J.B Hunt Transport Services — Shares jumped more than 7% after the company's third-quarter results topped expectations.
Persons: Novocure, Morgan Stanley —, accidently, J.B, Hunt, LSEG, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Cisco Systems, Citi, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, Revenue, United Airlines, United, Hunt, Locations: U.S
United Airlines — The travel stock dipped less than 1% despite United's third-quarter report beating estimates on the top and bottom lines. United reported adjusted earnings of $3.33 per share on $14.84 billion of revenue. Interactive Brokers — Shares of the brokerage firm fell more than 3% after third-quarter earnings missed expectations. J.B. Hunt Transport Services — The freight shipping company surged 8% after beating third-quarter estimates on the top and bottom lines. J.B. Hunt reported earnings of $1.49 per share on $3.07 billion of revenue.
Persons: LSEG, . Hunt Organizations: . United Airlines —, United, Interactive, Hunt Transport Services
Domino's posted $4.03 earnings per share, topping an LSEG estimate of $3.68 per share. United Airlines — Shares of the airline added 1.5% before the bell after it said profit jumped 23% last quarter . The bank and payments company posted $6.06 in earnings per share on $4.54 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated 98 cents earnings per share on $2.58 billion in revenue. Alcoa posted adjusted earnings of 16 cents per share, beating analysts' forecast for 9 cents per share, according to LSEG.
Persons: Domino's, United, LSEG, FactSet, Blackstone, Kinder Morgan —, Kinder Morgan, Baird, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin Organizations: United Airlines —, Discover Financial, Warner Bros, Financial Times, Alaska Air Group, Street, Taiwan Semiconductor —, Taiwan Semiconductor, Alcoa, Revenue, Mizuho, FactSet Locations: LSEG
The information for the following product(s) has been collected independently by Business Insider: Chase Freedom Flex®, American Express® Green Card, Amex EveryDay® Credit Card, Amex EveryDay® Preferred Credit Card, Citi Strata Premier℠ Card, Citi Prestige® Card, Citi® Double Cash Card, Citi Custom Cash℠ Card, Citi Rewards+® Card, Capital One Savor Cash Rewards Credit Card†. Introduction to transferable credit card rewardsAmong people well versed in rewards credit cards, there's a bit of common knowledge: Not all rewards are created equal. Several banks and rewards programs offer transferable points: Chase Ultimate Rewards® and American Express Membership Rewards, Citi ThankYou Rewards, Capital One Miles, Bilt Rewards, and Wells Fargo Autograph Rewards. Choosing the right card for transferable rewardsThe best transferable-point credit card for you depends on what credit card rewards program is most appealing. Transferable credit card rewards frequently asked questionsWhat makes transferable credit card rewards valuable?
Persons: Wells, Chase, Miles, cardholders, that's, Wells Fargo, we've, United Airlines —, Uber, Wiley, Julie Mehretu, Peacock, Uber Cash, You'll Organizations: Business, American, Citi Strata Premier, Card, Citi Prestige, Citi, American Express, Delta Air Lines, Bilt, Alaska Airlines —, Mastercard, Miles, Capital, United Airlines, Marriott, Hyatt, Bank, United, Chase Travel, Chase, Express, Hilton, Saks, Entertainment, Disney, ESPN, The New York Times, Street, Walmart, TSA, Global, Saks Fifth, Sapphire, Premier, CitiTravel.com, EV Locations: Wells Fargo, Here's, Southwest, Wells, Chicago, Munich, Hulu, Capital, Chevron
Discover Financial Services — Shares rose 2.7% after Discover Financial Services reported results from its second quarter. The bank and payments company posted net interest income of $3.52 billion, topping the FactSet consensus estimate of $3.46 billion. Kinder Morgan — Shares dropped 2.8% after Kinder Morgan posted quarterly results that were below expectations. United Airlines — The stock was down slightly, by 0.3% after United Airlines reported a mixed second quarter. Alcoa posted adjusted earnings of 16 cents per share, beating analysts' forecast for 9 cents per share, per LSEG.
Persons: Kinder Morgan —, Kinder Morgan, LSEG, , Darla Mercado Organizations: Discover Financial, Discover Financial Services, FactSet, Revenue, United Airlines, Steel, Steel Dynamics, Alcoa, Street
Rival United Airlines — second to Delta in net profit margins — is circling. Delta plans to open Delta One lounges in Boston and Los Angeles later this year, and is studying airports where it could open others. Like other airlines, Delta accepted billions in federal aid to weather the pandemic. Luxury air travel and the United States didn't go together for many years — and might not still, if you ask well-heeled globetrotters. And at Delta and other airlines, many of the perks for luxury flyers come through lounges.
Persons: Benoit Tessier, Ed Bastian's, Bastian, Ed Bastian, John F, Raymond James, Savanthi Syth, Andrew Nocella, Patrick Quayle, Quayle, Richard Anderson, Anderson, Delta, Barack Obama's, They're, Shai Weiss, Claude Roussel, Joe Biden, United States didn't, Henry Harteveldt, Scott Kirby Organizations: Airbus, Delta Air Lines, Reuters Delta Air Lines, Transportation Department, Rival United Airlines —, CNBC, Delta Air Lines Inc, Bloomberg, Getty, American Express, Kennedy International Airport, United, Boeing, U.S, Labor, Southwest Airlines, U.S ., JetBlue Airways, Delta, Corporate, Northwest Airlines, Endeavor, Virgin, American, Sky Club, New, LaGuardia, Etihad Airways, Singapore Airlines, Atmosphere Research, Airlines, Sky Clubs, Los Angeles International Airport, JFK, American Airlines, JPMorgan, Consumer Electronics, Starbucks Locations: punctuality, New York, Delta, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, Dubrovnik, Croatia, Amman, Jordan, Cape Town , South Africa, Atlanta, U.S, Queens, N.Y, United, Tokyo, York, United States, Las Vegas
Dick's Sporting Goods — The sporting goods retailer popped 7.7% after reporting an earnings and revenue beat for its fiscal first quarter. It now expects earnings per share to be between $13.35 and $13.75, up from its prior range of $12.85 to $13.25. Robinhood — The stock broker shares jump 1.6% in premarket after the trading startup announced its first-ever share buyback plan. Chewy posted earnings per share of 15 cents, topping a FactSet estimate of just 4 cents per share. Cava — The stock fell 5% in premarket even though the restaurant chain posted earnings and revenue for the first quarter that topped expectations.
Persons: Dick's, Robinhood, Chewy, Cava, LSEG, CNBC's David Faber, Merck, , Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Lisa Han, Sarah Min, Brian Evans, Hakyung Kim Organizations: ConocoPhillips —, Marathon Oil, Goods, LSEG . American Airlines —, United Airlines —, Jefferies, United Airlines, Google, HubSpot, Merck Locations: American, premarket
Robinhood management expects to execute the program over a two- to three-year period starting in the third quarter of 2024, a press release said. Cava reported earnings of 12 cents per share on revenue of $259 million, while analysts polled by LSEG anticipated earnings of 4 cents per share on $246 million in revenue. Box — The cloud storage company added 1.2% on the back of better-than-expected earnings and revenue. Box reported adjusted earnings of 39 cents per share, while analysts polled by LSEG expected earnings of 36 cents per share. United reaffirmed its second-quarter earnings outlook range of $3.75 and $4.25 per share, according to a regulatory filing .
Persons: Cava, LSEG, , Darla Mercado Organizations: Revenue, American Airlines, United Airlines — Locations: Cava
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Meme stocks — Meme stocks roared for a second day with GameStop surging more than 65% and AMC popping over 70%. AMC's Tuesday rally came even after the movie theater said it completed a $250 million stock sale during Monday's wild trading. Sony — U.S.-listed shares jumped 5.3% after quarterly revenue came in at 3.5 trillion yen, topping the consensus expectation of 2.89 trillion yen from analysts polled by LSEG. On Holding — The shoe maker jumped 16% after first-quarter earnings came in well ahead of analysts' expectations. Boston Beer Company — Shares added 1% after the beer brewer was upgraded by Jefferies to buy from hold.
Persons: United, Newell Brands, Roth, , Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans Organizations: GameStop, AMC, Sony —, LSEG, Vodafone — U.S, United Airlines —, Barclays, Boston Beer, Jefferies, JPMorgan Locations: Europe
Aerial view of United Airlines passenger planes docked in a terminal of Newark Airport in Newark, New Jersey, on May 11, 2024. Major airlines and an industry trade association asked a federal appeals court to toss out a new Department of Transportation rule requiring earlier disclosure of add-on fees during flight booking. The Biden administration introduced the airline fee disclosure rule in September 2022. Airlines for America said in a statement to CNBC on Monday that the rule will "confuse consumers" and "complicate the buying process." "Airlines already provide consumers with complete disclosure of all fees associated with air travel before they purchase a ticket," the group said in the statement.
Persons: Biden, Joe Biden Organizations: United Airlines, Newark Airport, of Transportation, Airlines for America, JetBlue, United, , Fifth, Airlines, America, CNBC Locations: Newark, Newark , New Jersey, Alaska, American, Delta, U.S
Quarterly revenue came in at $12.54 billion, topping an LSEG estimate of $12.45 billion. Travelers said it generated $4.69 in earnings per share on $10.18 billion in revenue. Interactive Brokers — Shares popped 3% after Interactive Brokers posted quarterly results that came in slightly ahead of Wall Street's expectations. J.B. Hunt posted earnings of $1.22 per share on $2.94 billion in revenue. Alcoa is set to report earnings after the bell.
Persons: LSEG, Eli Lilly, ASML, Hunt, Kate Spade, Abbott, Joe Biden's, Jefferies, , Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Sarah Min Organizations: United Airlines —, Travelers Companies, Travelers, U.S, Interactive, Hunt Transport Services, The New York Times, Federal Trade Commission, Versace, Capri Holdings, Autodesk —, Autodesk, Bancorp — U.S, Bancorp, Abbott Laboratories, FactSet, Alcoa Locations: China
Travelers — Shares fell nearly 5% after the insurance company reported an earnings and revenue miss for its first quarter. Revenue was $10.18 billion compared with the $10.51 billion expected. J.B. Hunt Transport Services — Shares sank 8% a day after the transportation and logistics company reported an earnings and revenue miss for its first quarter. ASML Holding — U.S.-listed shares sank 5% after the Dutch semiconductor company posted revenue and new bookings that came in below consensus estimates. Omnicom — The stock added nearly 3% a day after the communications company reported an earnings and revenue beat for its first quarter.
Persons: Eli Lilly, ResMed, Eli Lilly's, Zepbound, J.B, Hunt, Joe Biden, TD Cowen, Ferrari, Bernstein, , Dealbook, Kate Spade, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Fred Imbert Organizations: LSEG, Revenue, Travelers, United Airlines, Hunt Transport, ASML, Urban, Jefferies, Autodesk, Alcoa, United Steelworkers, Ferrari, Abbott, Abbott Laboratories, New York Times, Federal Trade Commission Locations: J.B, China, Pittsburgh
Recent pay raises have made commercial airline pilots some of the highest-paid workers in the US. The 3 major airlines, American, Delta, and United, all offer similar base pay for captains of up to $447 per hour. AdvertisementCommercial airline pilots have become some of the highest-paid workers in the US thanks to a suite of post-pandemic pay raises. Airline pilots at Delta and United have gotten heft profit-sharing in recent years. These hours pay the same rate and have guaranteed minimums of 70-75 hours, depending on the airline, according to the Air Line Pilots Association.
Persons: , Tim Boyle, ALPA, Nicolas Economou, widebodies, Boeing narrowbodies Organizations: Service, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Delta, Airbus, Boeing, Veterans, American, United, Airline, Getty, Air Line Pilots Association, BI, Delta Air Lines Delta Airlines Airbus, United Airlines Boeing Locations: Europe, Americas, South Africa, Japan, Australia, widebodies
Three major airlines, American, Delta, and United, offer similar captain base pay of up to $447 an hour. AdvertisementCommercial-airline pilots have become some of the highest-paid workers in the US thanks to a suite of post-pandemic pay raises. These pilots earn hundreds of dollars for every hour of flight time, with pay increasing with every year of seniority. These hours pay the same rate and have guaranteed minimums of 70 to 75 hours, depending on the airline, according to the Air Line Pilots Association. Related storiesHere's a breakdown of the base pay pilots at American, Delta, and United earn per hour of payable time, according to contracts sent to Business Insider from the airline or its union.
Persons: , Tim Boyle, ALPA, Nicolas Economou Organizations: United, Service, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Delta, Airbus, Boeing, Veterans, American, Airline, Getty, Air Line Pilots Association, Business, Delta Air Lines Delta Airlines Airbus, United Airlines Boeing Locations: Europe, Americas, South Africa, Japan, Australia
[About 70% of investors now think a rate cut will occur in June, according to the CME FedWatch tool.] Goldman Sachs is currently predicting a 15% chance of recession over the next 12 months, down from 35% last year. Seeing that happen made us more confident that the Fed wouldn’t be forced to cause a recession in order to get inflation down. The reason we say 15% risk is because that is roughly the historical unconditional average. So a 15% recession rate is baseline for you, it will never go below that number?
Persons: Dow, Bell, David Mericle, Goldman Sachs, It’s, it’s, we’ve, I’m, Samantha Delouya, authority’s, ” United, Joe Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal Reserve, Dow Jones, Goldman Sachs ’, Bell, National Bureau of Economic, FAA, United, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, United Boeing, , Federal Communications Commission, Program, Lawmakers, ACP, FCC Locations: New York, We’re, Medford , Oregon
Masimo — The medical technology company climbed nearly 5%. Wells Fargo upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight in light of the news. Super Micro Computer — The chip stock jumped nearly 10% after JPMorgan initiated coverage of the high-flying name. Foot Locker — Shares jumped 7% after Evercore upgraded shares to outperform from in line. Digital World Acquisition Corp. — The special purpose acquisition company leapt 26% after shareholders approved a merger with former President Donald Trump's social media company Trump Media & Technology Group, which owns Truth Social.
Persons: David Calhoun, Larry Kellner, Masimo, Wells Fargo, Samik Chatterjee, Chipmakers, Nelson Peltz's, Bob Iger, Evercore, Foot, Wedbush, GameStop's, Donald Trump's, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh, Sarah Min Organizations: Boeing, JPMorgan, Department of Energy, Semiconductor, Micron Technology, Nvidia, VanEck Semiconductor, Disney, Barclays, Fund Management, Mizuho, GameStop, Trump Media & Technology Group, Trump Media, United Airlines —, Reuters, U.S . Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines Locations: Wells, Cleveland, Department of Energy . Cleveland, Ohio, Pennsylvania
“Due to recent safety events, the FAA is increasing oversight of United Airlines to ensure that it is complying with safety regulations; identifying hazards and mitigating risk; and effectively managing safety,” an FAA spokesperson said in a statement. The civil aviation authority’s stepped up oversight comes after a United Boeing 737-800 landed in Medford, Oregon, missing an external panel on March 15. In just the last month, another United Boeing plane spewed flames from an engine after taking off, one slid off the runway, one lost a wheel during takeoff and another trailed hydraulic fluid. The FAA did not specify what future projects may be delayed by its evaluation, but on Saturday, Bloomberg reported the agency is considering preventing United Airlines from adding new routes, curbing the airline’s growth. Last week, a LATAM Airlines Boeing plane flying from Sydney, Australia, to Auckland, New Zealand, suddenly plunged in midair, injuring some passengers as they were thrown to the cabin’s ceiling.
Persons: authority’s, ” United, , CNN’s Gregory Wallace, Chris Isidore, Pete Muntean Organizations: CNN, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, FAA, United Boeing, Boeing, Bloomberg, United, , Alaska Airlines Boeing, Max, LATAM Airlines Boeing Locations: Medford , Oregon, United, Sydney, Australia, Auckland , New Zealand
Cloudflare — Shares surged 27% after the cloud services provider topped analysts' expectations in its fourth quarter. Cloudflare reported adjusted earnings of 15 cents per share on revenue of $362 million. Expedia reported earnings of $1.72 per share on revenue of $2.89 billion, higher than the $1.68 on $2.88 billion analysts had expected. Illumina — Shares dropped 4% even after the company reported fourth-quarter results that topped expectations, according to FactSet consensus estimates. Take-Two also reported adjusted earnings of 71 cents per share, slightly missing the FactSet consensus estimate for 72 cents earnings per share.
Persons: Cloudflare, LSEG, Pinterest, Expedia, Peter Kern, Ariane Gorin, CleanSpark, ClearnSpark, Illumina, Bill Holdings, Bill, — CNBC's Michelle Fox Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound Organizations: PepsiCo, Revenue, Pepsi, FactSet . Revenue, United Airlines —, ISI, Newell, Newell Brands, FactSet
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewEurope's biggest airline is defending Boeing as the American manufacturer deals with the fallout from the Alaska Airlines blowout. Boeing has faced renewed scrutiny since a 737 Max 9 jet operated by Alaska Airlines lost its door plug in midair on January 5. "If United Airlines wants to delay or cancel any of their Max orders, Ryanair will be very happy to take them," he added. AdvertisementThe ultra-low-cost carrier currently has 300 Max 10 jets on order, compared to United's 150.
Persons: , Michael O'Leary, Dave Calhoun, Brian West, " O'Leary, Scott Kirby, O'Leary, Kirby, Ryanair's O'Leary, who's, Max, he'd Organizations: Service, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Business, Ryanair, United Airlines —, CNBC, Kirby, United Airlines Locations: American
SEATTLE (AP) — Facing severe criticism after a door plug blew out on a 737 Max over Oregon this month, Boeing said Monday that it is withdrawing a request for a safety exemption needed to certify a new model of the plane. Maria Cantwell, chair of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, and Tammy Duckworth, chair of its aviation safety subcommittee, urged the Federal Aviation Administration to deny the request. "I hope this means they can quickly develop a compliant design across other MAX planes.”The FAA grounded all Max 9s in the U.S. the day after the blowout. The 737 Max went into service in May 2017. Boeing Commercial Airplanes president and CEO Stan Deal said in a message to Boeing employees Friday that the company’s most immediate goal is to help airlines restore operations.
Persons: Max, , Democratic Sens, Maria Cantwell, Tammy Duckworth, I’m, ” Duckworth, , ” Cantwell, Max 9s —, Stan Deal, Organizations: SEATTLE, , Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Democratic, Commerce, Science, Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, Federal, FAA, United Airlines —, Southwest Airlines, Boeing Commercial Airplanes Locations: Oregon, Portland , Oregon, Illinois, U.S, Alaska
CNN —Boeing’s 737 Max 9 model returned to service Friday afternoon when Alaska Airlines flight 1146 departed Seattle at approximately 3:51pm local time (6:51pm ET) bound for San Diego. It is the first revenue flight for this model since the Federal Aviation Administration grounded the Boeing jets three weeks ago following a door plug blowout on Alaska Airlines flight 1282. Alaska Airlines COO Constance von Muehlen took the flight and sat in the seat next to the door plug, telling CNN she has full confidence in the aircraft. The first flight is one of three flights Alaska Airlines has scheduled on Max 9 jets for Friday. Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci said Thursday he is not concerned with passengers avoiding the Max 9.
Persons: CNN —, Max, Constance von Muehlen, Sarah Edgbert, it’s, ” Edgbert, , ” Kent, Doug Bowman didn’t, , Ben Minicucci Organizations: CNN, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing, 9pm, United Airlines —, FAA, Max, . United Airlines Locations: Seattle, San Diego, Alaska
Read previewAlaska Airlines said Thursday that the grounding of its Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliners will reduce full-year profit by $150 million and slow down the airline's planned growth. Separately on Thursday, Southwest Airlines said that it will receive six fewer new planes than it expected this year because of ongoing production problems at Boeing. American Airlines CEO Robert Isom chimed in on Thursday, calling Boeing's safety issues "unacceptable." AdvertisementAnalysts expected American Airlines Group Inc. to earn 11 cents per share, according to a FactSet survey. Alaska's $2 million loss compared with a $22 million profit a year earlier.
Persons: , Max, Robert Isom chimed Organizations: Service, Alaska Airlines, Boeing, Max, Business, United Airlines —, Southwest Airlines, Southwest, American, American Airlines Group Inc, Revenue, Southwest Airlines Co, Dallas, Alaska Air Group Inc Locations: Alaska, Oregon, Seattle, United, Fort Worth , Texas
Read previewThe Boeing 737 Max 9 will return to the skies on Friday, three weeks after the Alaska Airlines blowout, the carrier announced Wednesday. According to Reuters, United Airlines — the biggest operator of the Max 9 with 79 of them — said it will start flying the jet again from Sunday. "It makes me angry," Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci told NBC. Not all the Max 9 jets will immediately return to service because some haven't been through the full inspection process yet. Alaska Airlines expects all its inspections to be completed over the next week.
Persons: , Max, Ben Minicucci, Scott Kirby, Mike Whitaker Organizations: Service, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Business, Reuters, United Airlines —, Federal Aviation Administration, Portland International, National Transportation Safety, NBC, CNBC, FAA Locations: Alaska
A federal judge on Tuesday blocked JetBlue Airways’ proposed $3.8 billion acquisition of Spirit Airlines, a victory for the Department of Justice, which argued that the deal would harm travelers. The proposed merger would have created the nation’s fifth-largest airline. The Justice Department had argued that smaller, low-cost airlines like Spirit help reduce fares and that allowing the company to be acquired by JetBlue, which tends to charge higher prices than Spirit, would have hurt consumers. The four largest U.S. airlines — American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines — control about two-thirds of the market. The merger would have given JetBlue a market share of 10 percent, still shy of United, the fourth-largest U.S. airline, which has 16 percent.
Persons: William G . Young Organizations: JetBlue Airways ’, Spirit Airlines, Department of Justice, U.S, District, Massachusetts, Justice Department, The Justice, JetBlue, — American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, United Airlines, U.S .
The Wells Fargo report, entitled “FAA audit opens up a whole new can of worms,” noted that Boeing’s quality control and engineering problems have been ongoing for years. After part of an Alaska Airlines] 737 Max 9 jet fell off the plane mid-flight, the likelihood of the US Federal Aviation Administration coming out of its investigation without significant findings was very low. The FAA last week opened an investigation into Boeing’s quality control after the Alaska Airlines incident. He also said Boeing is now more closely monitoring the work of a key supplier that builds the 737 Max fuselage. Wells Fargo analysts noted in their report that the FAA investigation could take some time to complete, noting many of its probes remain “under investigation” months after the original incidents.
Persons: Wells, , Max, Boeing “, Kirkland H, Donald “, Donald, David Calhoun, Stan Deal, Deal, Mike Whitaker, Calhoun, Jennifer Homendy, United Airlines —, , Pete Muntean, Chris Isidore, Ramishah Maruf Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, Wall, FAA, Alaska Airlines, US Federal Aviation Administration, NTSB, US, CNN, National Transportation, United Airlines Locations: New York, Portland , Oregon, Alaska, United, Indonesia, Ethiopia
Total: 25