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Shares of airlines took a dive Monday, after Warren Buffett said he sold off his large stakes in four air carriers, and after Air Canada gave a downbeat assessment of the overall industry amid the coronavirus pandemic.
That overshadowed upbeat comments from Southwest Airlines Co.’s Chief Executive Gary Kelly, who said he believed the worst had passed.
The U.S. Global Jets exchange-traded fund JETS, -7.24% dropped 8.5% in premarket trading. The selloff comes as futures ES00, -0.69% for the S&P 500 index SPX, -2.80% lost 0.8%.
Of the stocks Buffett previously owned, shares of American Airlines Group Inc. AAL, -11.40% slid 9.2% before Monday’s open, Delta Air Lines Inc. DAL, -6.90% slumped 9.1%, Southwest Airlines Co. LUV, -6.46% shed 7.8% and United Airlines Holdings Inc. UAL, -10.00% sank 10.1%.
“ “We expect that both the overall industry and our airline will be considerably smaller for some time, which will unfortunately result in significant reductions in both fleet and employee levels.” ”
As of the end of the 2019, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. BRK.B, -2.50% BRK.A, -2.74% was the largest shareholder in Delta with over 9% of the shares outstanding, and was the second-largest shareholder of American, Southwest and United. Buffett said over the weekend that the coronavirus pandemic made him realize he was “wrong” about the airline business.
Don’t miss: Buffett says he dumped his entire stake in airline-sector stocks: ‘The world changed for airlines’ amid coronavirus.
Buffett’s assessment comes after some airlines reported large first-quarter losses, and detailed the number of shares they were obligated to offer the U.S. government for accepting financial assistance through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.
Read: United Airlines says coronavirus pandemic is worst crisis ‘in the history of aviation.’
Also read: U.S. taxpayers set to be major investors in the struggling airline industry.
In an attempt to assuage investor concerns, Southwest Chief Executive Gary Kelly said on Sunday that he thinks the worst was past for his company.
“I think we’ve seen the bottom here in April,” Kelly said, in an interview on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” Each week after the first week of April has gotten successively better.”
Air Canada AC, -4.64% ACDVF, -5.56% reported Monday that it swung to a net C$1.05 billion loss ($743.7 million) in the first quarter as revenue declined 16%. The company said it cut second-quarter capacity by 85% to 90% from the year-ago period, and expects to cut third-quarter capacity by 75%, as the coronavirus pandemic has “materially” impacted both customer demand and raised liquidity concerns over the short and medium term.
“[W]hile the duration of the pandemic and its fallout remain unknown, it is our current expectation that it will take at least three years to recover to 2019 levels of revenue and capacity,” said Chief Executive Calin Rovinescu. “We expect that both the overall industry and our airline will be considerably smaller for some time, which will unfortunately result in significant reductions in both fleet and employee levels.”
Among other air carriers, shares of JetBlue Airways Corp. JBLU, -7.39% fell 7.5%, Alaska Air Group Inc. ALK, -7.41% lost 7.7%, Spirit Airlines Inc. SAVE, -12.31% declined 6.5% and Mesa Air Group Inc. MESA, -8.69% tumbled 9.6%.
The airline ETF has plunged 54.4% over the past three months through Friday, while the Dow Jones Transportation Average DJT, -2.77% has dropped 24.5% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -2.55% has declined 17.7%.