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Alaska Air CEO 'Confident' As Delta Spreads Wings On Home Turf

Airline rivals and allies converge at Atlanta's airport this week.
Sylvester Pittman
/
Airlineguys.com
Airline rivals and allies converge at Atlanta's airport this week.

The parent company of Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air announced strong earnings for the first quarter of the year on Friday.

Airline rivals and allies converge at Atlanta's airport this week.
Credit Sylvester Pittman / Airlineguys.com
/
Airlineguys.com
Airline rivals and allies converge at Atlanta's airport this week.

The airline group's CEO said he expects good results for the rest of 2014 too, despite growing competition from Delta Air Lines on Alaska's home turf.

Delta is dramatically ramping up its Seattle operations to build a new hub-city oriented toward the Pacific Rim.

Wall Street analysts peppered Alaska Air Group CEO Brad Tilden with questions about the competitive threat during a quarterly earnings call. Tilden responded that he's "confident" his airline's lower cost structure and loyal customer base will carry it through.

"If we operate well, if we operate safely, if we operate on time, if we build alignment with our leadership team and our people, and we all go out there and offer terrific service for the right fare, we think we're going to be okay."

Starting last month and continuing through the summer, Delta Air Lines is launching new international routes out of Seattle. The airline is also adding numerous new domestic flights to funnel connecting traffic to its increased long-haul service. This includes new service intoSeaTacAirport from Portland, Juneau, Las Vegas, and Vancouver, British Columbia.

In the past, Alaska Airlines and its sister carrier Horizon Air would have carried the lion's share of that feeder traffic and netted the associated revenue.

During on Wednesday, executive vice president Glen Hauenstein expressed excitement about the early returns from the carrier's buildup in Seattle.

"We're off to a great start and we have a lot more to go," said Hauenstein. "We do expect to become Seattle's largest carrier in terms of revenues in the third quarter of this year."

Rival executive Tilden was vague about what harm this is doing to the bottom line of his profitable Seattle-based airline.

"We believe our competitor's actions are creating a surplus of capacity in many of the markets we serve, which we will be dealing with until supply and demand come back into balance, which is something we do believe will happen."

Tilden said Alaska Airlines is redeploying some jets to seek greater profits. That includes an in-your-face expansion at Delta's Salt Lake City hub. In June, Alaska initiates new flights from Salt Lake to seven cities in the West, including Boise and Portland.

Airline customers may benefit in the near term. The added competition keeps a lid on fares on contested routes. In addition, frequent fliers currently have a range of mileage promotions to compare and register for.

Alaska Air Group and Delta Air Lines have a standing joint-marketing partnership and offer reciprocal frequent flier benefits. On social media and online bulletin boards, some of Alaska's frequent fliers have mournfully predicted the demise of this alliance.

On Friday, Tilden downplayed the prospect of an imminent breakup.

"We are in the midst of a long term agreement. We have a long term contract with Delta right now."

Copyright 2014 Northwest News Network

Tom Banse
Tom Banse covers national news, business, science, public policy, Olympic sports and human interest stories from across the Northwest. He reports from well known and out–of–the–way places in the region where important, amusing, touching, or outrageous events are unfolding. Tom's stories can be found online and heard on-air during "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered" on NPR stations in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho.