Earnings and Losses

Storms cut Air Methods 4Q profit by 27 percent

Bad weather forces Air Methods 4Q profit down 27 percent

Air Methods Corp., which provides emergency medical air transportation, said Friday that its fourth-quarter profit fell 27 percent as severe weather led providers to cancel patient transports.

Its net income fell to $2.7 million, or 22 cents per share, compared with $3.7 million, or 30 cents per share, a year earlier. Its revenue rose 1 percent to $120.2 million.

The results included a loss of $200,000 from the disposition of assets, compared with a gain of $300,000 a year earlier.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters, who typically exclude such one-time items, expected Air Methods to earn 27 cents per share on revenue of $121.6 million.

Its shares rose 4 cents to close at $27.74.

The number of patients the company transported in the fourth quarter from bases that had been in operation for more than a year fell 9 percent. Bad weather caused the cancellation of 781 more transports than the same period a year ago.

For the current quarter, the company said the figure was down 15 percent, compared with a year earlier. Requests for community-based services at bases open longer than a year also decreased 8 percent due to severe weather.

For all of 2009, the company earned $29 million, or $2.33 per share, up 50 percent from the $19.3 million, or $1.54 per share the previous year. Its revenue rose to $510.6 million from $498.8 million. Analysts expected profit of $2.37 on revenue of $510.7 million.

Air Methods' 2008 revenue included $7.7 million related to hurricane response under a contract with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. It generated no such revenue in 2009.

CEO Aaron Todd said the earnings growth resulted in part from a conversion to single-engine aircraft from twin-engine, lower fuel prices and improved reimbursements for each community-based transport.

Todd said flight volume should return to normal as the weather moderates.

AP News |