What Delta's earnings reveal about the state of travel

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Delta reported record earnings for its second quarter, beating estimates on the top and bottom line and raising its guidance. TD Cowen Senior Research Analyst Helane Becker joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the company’s results and what they tell us about both business and leisure travel.

Video Transcript

- Pent up demand for travel driving Delta earnings to a record high, the airline also boosting its full year guidance. Joining us now is TD Cowen senior research analyst Helane Becker. Now, Helane, you had predicted that they would post record numbers previously. You predicted that for this quarter and even the coming quarter. What's your first takeaway from today's numbers?

HELANE BECKER: Thanks for the question. The numbers are very good. Demand is very strong and you see that at airports around not only the United States, but around the world. People really want to make up for lost time and are getting out and traveling. And the fact that they have the ability to do so, not only from a financial perspective but from the time perspective, the fact that they can travel, make almost any weekend a long weekend because of work from anywhere opportunities.

- Helane, is this a case across the board, not just Delta? And also, more specifically, the comments that we heard from Ed Bastian when it comes to corporate travel, he is very optimistic that that is going to continue to move to the upside here. What does that growth look like? Are we ever going to get back to those 2019 levels?

HELANE BECKER: Yeah, no, I think that's a really fair question, because he mentioned-- and he mentioned on the call this morning, and we've said this before, the US economy is, what, 15 20% bigger now than it was four years ago? So just in terms of the size of the economy, it should drive higher business traffic. It's just there's this hybrid work environment, and when you plan a business trip to go see your clients, it's increasingly difficult because some companies are in the office Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, others are in Tuesday to Thursday. It seems like Friday is a work from anywhere day.

So I think it makes travel from a business perspective more difficult. We certainly have seen growth in attendance at conferences. We're pretty much back to 2019 and prior year levels from that perspective. And our view has really been evolving that into this more, yes, we're going to see more business travel. It's just where you're going to see it I think is changing.

Small and medium sized companies have never really stopped traveling. It's just the large corporates. Tech, financial services as an example, that have curtailed travel. And I think as your competitors travel, because your travel salespeople travel, as your competitors travel and they win business, I think you'll see people start to get back on the road.