Airlines Avelo and Breeze, three years after their pandemic debut, prepare for a profitable year
In the nearly four years since the Covid-19 pandemic upended air travel, the largest US airlines have returned to profitability. The CEOs of two upstart airlines that launched in the middle of the pandemic say they’re about to join them. Avelo and Breeze Airways, two low-cost carriers that debuted in 2021 when US air travel demand was more than 30% below pre-pandemic levels, have both grown their operations rapidly. They’ve launched dozens of new routes across the country, and their founders say their strategy of linking cities where there’s less competition from large carriers is paying off. Think Los Angeles’ Hollywood Burbank Airport, rather than Los Angeles International, or Islip, Long Island, over New York City. “When you have Goliaths, and you’re just David, it’s really hard,” said Avelo Airlines CEO Andrew Levy. Delta, American, United and Southwest together control about three-quarters of the US market, according to Cirium data. Avelo says it flew 2.3m customers in 2023, and that its planes were more than 80% full on average. Breeze flew more than 2.8m travelers last year, and its flights were 77% full, according to the company. The carriers are still tiny. For comparison, Southwest Airlines, the largest domestic carrier, flew more than 137m passengers last year. Yet, Avelo reported its first profitable quarter in the last three months of 2023, and a company spokesperson said the airline will likely turn an annual profit in 2024. It brought in revenue of $265m for the full year 2023, up 74% from the prior year. Levy said he had expected the airline to turn a profit sooner, but high fuel costs during a period of broad inflation and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine two years ago pushed back the timeline. Breeze is also on track for its first profitable year in 2024, said CEO David Neeleman. Story has more.<br/>
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Airlines Avelo and Breeze, three years after their pandemic debut, prepare for a profitable year
In the nearly four years since the Covid-19 pandemic upended air travel, the largest US airlines have returned to profitability. The CEOs of two upstart airlines that launched in the middle of the pandemic say they’re about to join them. Avelo and Breeze Airways, two low-cost carriers that debuted in 2021 when US air travel demand was more than 30% below pre-pandemic levels, have both grown their operations rapidly. They’ve launched dozens of new routes across the country, and their founders say their strategy of linking cities where there’s less competition from large carriers is paying off. Think Los Angeles’ Hollywood Burbank Airport, rather than Los Angeles International, or Islip, Long Island, over New York City. “When you have Goliaths, and you’re just David, it’s really hard,” said Avelo Airlines CEO Andrew Levy. Delta, American, United and Southwest together control about three-quarters of the US market, according to Cirium data. Avelo says it flew 2.3m customers in 2023, and that its planes were more than 80% full on average. Breeze flew more than 2.8m travelers last year, and its flights were 77% full, according to the company. The carriers are still tiny. For comparison, Southwest Airlines, the largest domestic carrier, flew more than 137m passengers last year. Yet, Avelo reported its first profitable quarter in the last three months of 2023, and a company spokesperson said the airline will likely turn an annual profit in 2024. It brought in revenue of $265m for the full year 2023, up 74% from the prior year. Levy said he had expected the airline to turn a profit sooner, but high fuel costs during a period of broad inflation and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine two years ago pushed back the timeline. Breeze is also on track for its first profitable year in 2024, said CEO David Neeleman. Story has more.<br/>