Skift Take
Deltaâs bottom line is taking a hit from the CrowdStrike outage as it seeks legal recourse for a meltdown that led to thousands of flight disruptions.
Delta Air Lines cut its third-quarter revenue forecast due to the CrowdStrike outage that caused the carrier to cancel thousands of flights.
The airline now expects its revenue to be flat or up 1% for the quarter. Previous guidance had revenues up between 2% and 4%.
A software update from CrowdStrike on July 19 spurred a massive IT outage that affected industries ranging from airlines to healthcare. As a result, airlines worldwide canceled thousands of flights.
However, Delta took much longer to recover than its competitors. During the meltdown, customers also complained about how they hadnât been offered refunds, reimbursements for hotel accommodations or meal vouchers. The Department of Transportation is currently investigating Deltaâs customer service response to the meltdown.
Delta said it expects the outage to cost it $380 million in lost revenue and $170 million in expenses.
Despite the impact on revenue, Deltaâs forecast was otherwise rosy as it anticipates lower fuel costs and positive revenue growth in September for domestic and transatlantic flights.
The forecast comes as JetBlue, Frontier Airlines and Alaska Airlines have also reported lower fuel costs and an uptick in revenue.
The Blame Game
Since the meltdown, Delta has been in a legal blame game with lawyers at Microsoft and CrowdStrike. The carrier hired prominent attorney David Boies to potentially seek damages for the outage.
CrowdStrikeâs lawyer claimed the Delta refused to accept its offer of onsite help during the meltdown. Microsoft said it believed Delta has not âmodernized its IT infrastructure,â which was why the airline took longer to bounce back.
However, Delta has refuted some of those claims. The carrier said CrowdStrikeâs offer was âunhelpful and untimely.â Boies wrote that CrowdStrikeâs offer came four days into the meltdown and at that point Delta had already restored most of its critical systems.
CrowdStrike CEO George Kurz told CNBC on August 29 that he wanted to âcome to a resolutionâ on the matter.
âDeltaâs a customer, and like any customer, you want to try to get this resolved, in the most expeditious way, and weâre certainly willing and open to do that,â Kurz said.
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