Wednesday, US Airways Group, Inc. (LCC) announced a decline in traffic for the month of January. The month's capacity dropped, while passenger load factor increased.
The Tempe, Arizona - based company recorded a 6.2% decline in mainline revenue passenger miles or RPM to 4.352 billion from 4.639 billion a year ago. Traffic for the Domestic segment was down 8.1% at 3.478 billion compared to 3.782 billion in the previous year. Atlantic recorded a 2.6% decline in revenue passenger miles to 455.96 million from 468.172 million last year. Latin segment reported 7.7% increase in revenue to 418.191 million from 388.393 million a year ago.
Total mainline available seat miles or capacity for the month were down 6.9% at 5.743 billion, compared to 6.172 billion in the previous year. Capacity for Domestic segment declined 10.5% to 4.463 billion from 4.984 billion last year. Atlantic reported 1.3% increase in capacity to 712.145 million and Latin segment's capacity increased 17.2% to 568.427 million from 484.980 million in the previous year.
US Airways posted a 2 percentage points increase in mainline load factor to 77.9% on top of 75.9% reported last year. Load factor for Atlantic declined 2.6 percentage points to 64% and Latin segment reported a 6.5 percentage points decrease in load factor to 73.6%.
US Airways Express that comprises Piedmont Airlines and PSA Airlines recorded a domestic traffic of 146.432 million, down 6.7% from 156.873 million a year ago. Capacity dropped 4.1% at 256.035 million compared to 267.026 million last year. For the month, Express load factor was down 1.5 points to 57.2%.
Commenting on the performance, Scott Kirby, president of US Airways said, the results reflect the slowing economy.
LCC is currently trading at $5.85, up $0.07 or 1.21% on a volume of 2.850 million shares.
For comments and feedback contact: editorial@rttnews.com
June 12, 2026 17:14 ET Major central bank action was the focus this week in economic news. The European Central Bank became the first major central bank to move in response to the rising inflationary pressures in the backdrop of the conflict in the Middle East. In North America, the U.S. inflation and trade data as well as Canada’s central bank decision gained attention. The Chinese trade data was the main news in Asia.