![Record numbers of people are flying. So why are airlines’ profits plunging?](https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/gettyimages-2159000283.jpg?c=16x9&q=w_800,c_fill)
Record numbers of people are flying. So why are airlines’ profits plunging?
CNN
A record number of passengers are expected to pass through US airports during this holiday travel week, as what is forecast to be a very strong summer vacation season kicks into high gear. You’d think this would be a great time to run an airline. You’d be wrong.
A record number of passengers are expected to pass through US airports this holiday travel week. You’d think this would be a great time to run an airline. You’d be wrong. Airlines face numerous problems, including higher costs, such as fuel, wages and interest rates. And problems at Boeing mean airlines have too few planes to expand routes to support a record numbers of flyers. Strong bookings can’t entirely offset that financial squeeze. The good news for passengers is they will be spared most of the problems hurting airlines’ bottom lines — at least in the near term. Airfares are driven far more by supply and demand, not their costs. But in the long run, the airlines’ difficulties could mean fewer airline routes, less passenger choice and ultimately a less pleasant flying experience. Industry analysts expect airlines to report a drop of about $2 billion in profit, or 33%, when they report financial results for the April to June period this year. That would follow losses of nearly $800 million across the industry in the first quarter.