Business
Southwest CEO says airline ‘actively pursuing’ network of airport lounges
A Southwest Airlines plane takes off from Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S., November 7, 2025.
Tim Evans | Reuters
Southwest Airlines is “actively pursuing” the possibility of opening a network of airport lounges, CEO Bob Jordan told CNBC on Wednesday, as the airline industry continues to fight over premium travelers.
“I think lounges would be a huge, next benefit for our customers,” Jordan said in an interview. “And you [would] have a lounge network that allows you to offer that premium credit card that provides lounge access.”
Southwest is discussing airport leases and lounge possibilities, along with its credit card partner, Chase. The Dallas-based airline in October won approval for an airport lounge at Honolulu’s Daniel K. Inouye International Airport.
Jordan declined to provide a time frame for opening what would likely be a “network” of airport lounges but said “it’s clear our customers want lounges, and we’re pursuing the customer.”
“We’re gonna make sure that we have a network of lounges that meets the needs of the network that we have,” he said.
Large carriers from Delta Air Lines to smaller ones like JetBlue Airways, along with credit card companies like American Express, Capital One and Chase have been building airport lounges, spaces they’ve leaned on to reel in and retain higher-spending consumers.
A J.D. Power report released Wednesday said 82% of people it surveyed said they chose an airline based on lounge access.
Southwest, which carries more customers domestically than any other airline, has drastically changed its business model over the past year to scrap open seating in favor of assigned seats, among other things. It even started charging customers to check bags earlier this year to increase revenue as pressure ramped up from activist Elliott Investment Management.
Southwest this fall started offering free Wi-Fi to members of its loyalty program. Jordan said the company is open to pursuing other onboard providers for in-flight internet, including Space X’s Starlink, the service United Airlines recently started using.
Business
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Business
Interest rate cuts not on the horizon, Bank of England governor says
Reopening the Strait of Hormuz is “the best thing to do” to prevent interest rates rising, Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has said.
In an interview on Thursday evening after the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted unanimously to leave the rate unchanged at 3.75%, Mr Bailey said any further cuts are “not on the horizon” as he hinted at possible hikes.
It is the first time that all members have voted the same way since September 2021.
Iran effectively closed the vital oil and gas shipping route after the US and Israel attacked the country, which has pushed up global prices.
Mr Bailey said the war in the Middle East is hitting petrol pumps now, will likely increase household energy costs in summer, and put pressure on food prices.
He told LBC’s Andrew Marr: “The duration of this problem is crucial.
“I would also say very clearly that the best way to solve this situation is not through monetary policy. It is through sorting out at the source of what’s going on.
“Frankly, reopening the Strait of Hormuz is the best thing to do. Get the energy market back on its normal footing, as it were.”
Asked if he has a message for US President Donald Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and “whoever’s in charge in Tehran”, Mr Bailey said: “The best thing we can do actually for the world economy… is to sort out the problem in terms of reopening the energy supply lines, because that is in the best interest of people in the world.”
UK military planners have joined the US Central Command to help formulate proposals for opening the Strait.
The MPC now expects Consumer Prices Index inflation to be around 3% in the second quarter of 2026, up from the 2.1% that had been forecast in February, with a potential rise in inflation up to 3.5% in the third quarter.
Mr Bailey was asked if he foresees, in the final two years of his term, the ambition to reduce inflation to at or below 2% being fulfilled.
He told the programme: “If you’d asked me this question three weeks ago, I was very optimistic on this.”
The governor added: “We are fully committed to the inflation target, and our job, frankly, is to deal with the shocks as they come along.
“I have to do that. I don’t wish them. I wish they were not happening, but they are and we will have to deal with them.”
He said the impact of the war will likely feed through into a higher Ofgem energy price cap from July.
It was put to Mr Bailey that the Middle East crisis comes at a time when the UK economy has already “not been growing strongly”.
He responded: “It is a very difficult time to have this happen, but frankly, any time would be pretty difficult to have this happen.
“This is a major shock to energy prices, and we have to deal with it.”
He said the “sustainable rate of growth” in the UK needs to be raised which could come from investment from pensions and artificial intelligence.
“I’m not starry-eyed about it, but it is probably the most likely area that we’re going to raise the growth rate of the economy and that’s important”, he said of AI.
The MPC signalled that if the conflict persists and has a bigger impact on UK prices, it would need to take a “more restrictive policy stance”, which indicates higher interest rates to control inflation.
The governor added: “The longer it goes on… I’m afraid to say, but it is rather an obvious point, the effect will be larger.”
He said that is why it is “imperative” that “everything is done that can be done to alleviate this effect”, adding: “That is the critical thing.”
Business
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