S&P Downgrades Southwest Airlines
By wchung | 03 Jul, 2026
Standard & Poor’s downgraded Southwest Airlines Co. one notch on Wednesday, citing lower demand for travel and weak pricing that have cut into the company’s earnings and cash flow.
The ratings agency lowered Southwest debt to BBB from BBB+, and also assigned it a negative outlook.
S&P left Southwest debt at investment grade, however, two rungs above junk status.
U.S. airlines have been struggling with weak demand, especially among high-fare business travelers. They’ve had to slash prices to fill seats.
But Southwest, which was scheduled to report third-quarter financial results Thursday, said its September traffic increased 8.8 percent compared with a year earlier. And it said passenger revenue per available seat mile rose 3 percent.
S&P said it gave a negative outlook to Dallas-based Southwest because of concern over how quickly and how strongly earnings can improve.
Southwest shares rose 46 cents, or 4.8 percent in regular trading Wednesday, then lost 10 cents in extended trading.
10/14/2009 6:57 PM DALLAS (AP)
Recent Articles
- US-EU Trade Hits Record High Despite Tariff Tensions, Study Shows
- Chinese Independent Refiners Snap up Discounted Mideast Oil as Supplies Rise
- US Oil Companies See Big Profit Jump, Faces Pressure to Cut Pump Prices
- Drug Gangs Use Social Media to Recruit Thai Air Crew as Couriers
- Ghonhee Lee's Katalyst Launches Orbital Rescue Mission for NASA Satellite
- Zuckerberg Says Meta AI Agent Tech Progressing Slower Than Expected
- Japan's Services Activity Returned to Growth in June
- Air Force to Investigate Officer Who Called for Trump Impeachment
- How Americans Plan to Celebrate July 4th 250
- Tesla's China-Made EV Sales Jumped 24.4% on Year in June
