AZUL's Q1 Earnings and Revenues Fall Short of Expectations

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Azul S.A. (AZUL) incurred a loss of $2.18 per share in the first quarter of 2025,in contrast to the Zacks Consensus Estimate of earnings of 4 cents per share. Loss per share was 57 cents in the first quarter of 2024.

Total revenues of $920 million lagged the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $925 million. AZUL’s first-quarter 2025 revenues benefit from a healthy demand environment, robust ancillary revenues and the outstanding performance of its business units. With more people taking to the skies, Azul’s passenger revenues, contributing 93% to the top line, grew 15.2% year over year.

Cargo revenues and other grew 17.3% year over year, driven by improved performance and the recovery of AZUL’s international operations. In first-quarter 2025, international cargo revenues reported a solid 62% year-over-year growth, with a healthy EBITDA that more than doubled year over year.

AZUL Price, Consensus and EPS Surprise

AZUL price-consensus-eps-surprise-chart | AZUL Quote

AZUL’s Other Q1 Details

Consolidated traffic, measured in revenue passenger kilometers (RPKs), rose 19.4% (up 14.7% domestic and 38.3% on the international front) year over year. Consolidated available seat kilometers (ASK), measuring an airline's passenger-carrying capacity, increased 15.6% from the year-ago quarter, with a 10.2% rise in domestic capacity and a 39.2% surge in international capacity. Since traffic outpaced the capacity expansion, load factor (percentage of seats filled with passengers) grew 2.6 percentage points to 81.5%.

Azul’s total revenues per ASK or RASK were R$42.14 cents, down 0.2% year over year. Passenger revenues per ASK or PRASK decreased 0.4% year over year.

Fuel cost per liter grew 3% year over year.

Cost per ASK (CASK) grew 7.6% from the first-quarter 2024 reported figure. The upside was due to the 18% average depreciation of the Brazilian real against the US dollar, 5.5% inflation over the last 12 months, an increase in AZUL’s international operations (which have higher airport fees and distribution costs) and growth of AZUL’s fleet (which increased depreciation). These were partially offset by several cost-reduction initiatives related to productivity, as well as lower fuel burn from the next-generation aircraft in AZUL’s fleet.

CASK, excluding fuel, grew 11.5% year over year. Average fare grew 4.9% from the year-ago quarter figure.

Operating expenses of R$4.82 billion grew 24.4% year over year, due to the 15.6% increase in total capacity, an 18% depreciation of the Brazilian real against the US dollar and a 3% increase in fuel price. These were offset by higher productivity and cost-reduction initiatives.