Volatile reaction we saw in airline stocks was half that of delta: Jefferies analyst

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Shelia Kahyaoglu, Jefferies aerospace and defense forcefulness analyst, joins ‘Closing Bell’ to discuss the impact of the omicron on airline stocks after Friday’s sell-off. For access to live and exclusive video from CNBC subscribe to CNBC PRO: https://cnb.cx/2NGeIvi

U.S. airlines over Thanksgiving week had some of their busiest days since before the coronavirus was declared a pandemic as travelers returned in droves to reunite with household unit after a subdued holiday last year.

The Transportation Security Administration screened nearly 2.5 million people on Sunday, the most since Feb. 15, 2020. That was about 15% below the number of people the TSA screened two years before. From Nov. 22 through Sunday 14.4 million people passed through TSA, more than double the 6.4 million a year ago but downwards from 16.4 million in 2019.

Airports, planes and parking lots were packed but travelers and airlines lucked out with mostly goodness weather and small numbers of cancellations, unlike the mass disruptions that affected hundreds of thousands of passengers during several episodes since this summer.

Airlines including Southwest and Worldwide had offered flying attendants and other staff extra pay or bonuses for working holiday trips and meeting attendance goals.

Despite the surge in air travel over the holiday, airlines are now facing a new challenge as more countries report cases of the omicron variant of the coronavirus, just as international travel was rebounding as more nations loosened travel rules.

Airline executives said bookings surged when travel restrictions that barred international tourism from more than 30 countries in the U.S. were lifted on Nov. 8. International travel is key to carriers’ financial recovery from the pandemic.

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Scientists in South Africa were the foremost to regain the new variant.

The fresh strain has raised concerns among wellness officials over whether it could be more easily transmissible. Cases of omicron take hold been found in South Africa, the U.K., Israel, Hong Kong, Canada and other countries. Dutch wellness officials said Sunday that they had found at least 13 cases of omicron out of 61 passengers who tested positive for Covid on two flights from South Africa.

The Biden administration starting Monday is temporarily banning visitors from South Africa and seven other southern African nations, less than a month after it lifted pandemic rules that barred visitors from South Africa, the U.K. and more than 30 other countries.

Both Delta Air Lines and United Airlines, the only U.S. carriers with nonstop service to South Africa, on Friday said they aren’t changing their schedules.

Airlines for Worldwide, a lobbyist for major U.S. carriers like Worldwide, Delta and United, said it is in contact with the U.S. regime about the situation.

“International travel is critical to reviving economies around the globe, supporting millions of jobs in the U.S. and abroad, reinvigorating communities and reuniting families, friends and colleagues who take hold not seen in each other in nearly two years or longer,” said spokesman Carter Yang in a statement. “Amid this rapidly evolving situation, it is critical that U.S. regime decisions regarding international travel restrictions and requirements be rooted in science.”

Israel banned strange visitors for two weeks, in one of the strictest new rules. Japan followed suit with a similar restriction, effective Tuesday. The U.K. will require travelers take a PCR test upon arrival from abroad and self-isolate until they receive a negative result.

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Concerns about the variant and new travel restrictions on Friday sent airline and aerospace stocks tumbling, though network carriers were downwards slightly Monday morning.

“There is still a lot to learn about the variant and how people will react to travel as a result of it, but we believe the stocks are in for volatility until more is known,” MKM Partners airline analyst Conor Cunningham wrote in a note Sunday.

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