American Airlines parent AMR on Wednesday reported a quarterly net loss on weaker travel demand, although it was much smaller than expected.
The company said its first-quarter net loss was USD$375 million, or USD$1.35 per share, compared with USD$341 million, or USD$1.37 per share, a year ago.
Excluding items, the company lost USD$1.30 a share.
The results include the impact of a USD$13 million charge, or 5 cents per share, reflecting the value of future lease payments related to aircraft retirements in the quarter.
The airline industry has been battered this year by falling demand as the economic recession takes its toll on travel budgets. The industry downsized last year and in 2009 continues to shrink capacity to offset weakness.
American cut its mainline capacity 8 percent compared with the year-ago period in 2008. The company said its mainline costs per available seat mile, excluding fuel, increased 6.8 percent in the quarter.
AMR ended the first quarter with USD$3.3 billion in cash and short-term investments.
