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Alaska Air: Demand and fares may support cash flow in the second half despite fuel price shock

Alaska Air Group hopes to reinstate its financial guidance during its second-quarter earnings conference call, if fuel prices stabilize, said Chief Financial Officer Shane Tackett on Saturday. Volatility in jet fuel costs had forced the carrier's?full year outlook.

Alaska is unwilling to restore guidance until they have more confidence about the outlook.

Tackett, speaking at the annual meeting of the International Air Transport Association in Rio de Janeiro, said: "We would like to see more stability."

Tackett says that the carrier is expecting a more difficult second quarter than they had expected before the recent fuel shock. However, he said that higher fares and resilient customer demand should help to offset the majority of the impact in the second half. He predicted that operating cash burn would fall to zero or even turn positive in the second part of the year.

Alaska recently borrowed $1 billion, divided between secured and unsecured debt. But?Tackett stated that the company did not plan to make another liquidity move, or reduce capital spending.

He said that corporate bookings for the next 90-day period are up 20-30% from a similar time last year, across most industries and geographies.

Tackett stated that Alaska also works with energy companies to obtain more jet fuel from Singapore for the West Coast, as refining margins are high in its core geographies.

He stated that the airline has no plans to retire Hawaiian Airlines' Airbus A330s and A321s, and they expect to remain an Airbus operator for "a long time." (Reporting and editing by Manuela Andréoni in Rio de Janeiro)

(source: Reuters)