FORT WORTH, Texas — /PRNewswire/
— AMR Corporation, the parent company of American Airlines, Inc.,
today filed its annual report on Form 10-K with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission. The report summarizes AMR's business and financial
results for 2011 on a consolidated basis and is available in the
Investor Relations section of AA.com.
Fourth Quarter 2011 Results
AMR recorded a consolidated net loss of $1.1 billion for the fourth quarter of 2011 compared to a consolidated net loss of $97 million in the fourth quarter of 2010. The fourth quarter 2011 results include:
- $886 million in non-cash special charges and reorganization items.
- Of that amount, $768 million is related to special items, which includes a $725 million non-cash charge resulting from the impairment of certain aircraft and gates and a $43 million unfavorable adjustment to revenue, as a result of changes in assumptions related to the recognition of AAdvantage® revenue.
- The Company recognized $118 million in reorganization items, primarily due to the rejection of 24 leased aircraft: 20 MD-80s and 4 Fokker 100s; as well as professional fees.
Excluding these items, the loss in the fourth quarter of 2011 was
$209 million, which compares to a loss, excluding special items, of $69
million in the same period of 2010.
Fourth Quarter Financial and Operational PerformanceAMR recorded fourth quarter 2011 consolidated revenues of approximately $6.0 billion, an increase of 7.4 percent year-over-year.
- American's mainline passenger revenue per available seat mile (unit revenue) increased by 8.9 percent in fourth quarter 2011 compared to fourth quarter 2010.
- Mainline capacity, or total available seat miles, in fourth quarter 2011 decreased by 1.9 percent compared to the same period in 2010.
- American's mainline load factor – or the percentage of total seats filled – was 82.1 percent during fourth quarter 2011, compared to 81.6 percent in fourth quarter 2010.
Taking into account the impact of fuel hedging, AMR paid
approximately $3.01 per gallon for jet fuel in the fourth quarter of
2011 versus approximately $2.42 per gallon in fourth quarter 2010, a
24.5 percent increase. As a result, the Company paid $394 million more
for fuel in fourth quarter 2011 than it would have paid at prevailing
prices from the prior-year period.
Fiscal Year 2011 Results
For fiscal 2011, AMR recorded a consolidated net loss of approximately $2.0 billion, which compares to a consolidated net loss of $471 million for fiscal 2010.
Fiscal Year 2011 results include:
- $917 million in non-cash special charges and reorganization items.
- Of that amount, $799 million is related to special items, which includes a $725 million non-cash charge resulting from the impairment of certain aircraft and gates, $31 million of non-recurring non-cash charges related to certain sale/leaseback transactions, and a $43 million unfavorable adjustment to revenue, as a result of changes in assumptions related to the recognition of AAdvantage revenue.
- The Company also recognized $118 million in reorganization items, primarily due to the rejection of 24 leased aircraft: 20 MD-80s and 4 Fokker 100s; as well as professional fees.
Excluding the items described above, the Company's consolidated net
loss was approximately $1.1 billion in 2011, versus a consolidated net
loss of $389 million excluding special items in 2010.
For fiscal year 2011, including the impact of fuel hedging, AMR paid
an average of $3.01 per gallon for jet fuel compared to an average of
$2.32 in 2010, a 30.1 percent increase. As a result, the Company paid
nearly $2.0 billion more for jet fuel in full-year 2011 than it would
have paid at prevailing prices in the prior full-year period.
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