US Airways said net income doubled in the fourth quarter as its planes were fuller and it made more money off each passenger.
The airline on Wednesday reported a profit of $37 million, or 22 cents per share, compared with $18 million, or 11 cents per share a year ago. Excluding special items, net income was 26 cents per share, 7 cents higher than analyst forecasts, according to FactSet.
Revenue rose 3.9 percent to $3.28 billon.
Per-seat passenger revenue — a key performance indicator for airlines — rose 2.2 percent. Occupancy rose 2 percentage points to 83.9 percent.
US Airways is in merger talks with American Airlines, but didn’t address the talks in its earnings release.
Some have assumed that as the fifth-biggest US airline, US Airways needs the American merger to survive. JPMorgan analyst Jamie Baker wrote in a note to investors Wednesday that he disagrees.
“With 2012 margins just shy of Delta while topping those of Southwest and United, we find investor stand-alone pessimism to be significantly misplaced,” he wrote.
Shares of Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways Group Inc. rose 30 cents, or 2 percent, to $15.15 in morning trading.
For the full year, net income jumped to $637 million, or $3.28 per share — the largest profit in the airline’s history, the company said. In 2011 it earned $71 million, or 44 cents per share. Revenue for 2012 rose almost 6 percent to $13.83 billion.
While United and Delta have been flying about the same or less, US Airways added a little bit of flying last year. Flying capacity rose 1.4 percent in the fourth quarter, and 2 percent for the full year.
“We couldn’t be happier with the performance of US Airways in 2012,” Chairman and CEO Doug Parker said in a statement.