Go Back  Airline Pilot Central Forums > Airline Pilot Forums > Major
Alaska Air good fortunes >

Alaska Air good fortunes

Notices
Major Legacy, National, and LCC

Alaska Air good fortunes

Old 11-16-2005, 09:21 PM
  #1  
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
 
Sir James's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Feb 2005
Position: 737 CFI
Posts: 390
Default Alaska Air good fortunes

Posted on Thu, Nov. 17, 2005

Alaska Air flies above industry turmoil


Associated Press

CHICAGO - In the turbulent U.S. airline sector, Alaska Air Group Inc. is doing something few in the sector can claim - staying on a steady course to post a profit this year and in 2006.

Only Southwest Airlines Inc. has a better track record than Seattle-based Alaska Air, the parent of Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air.

Multiyear losses at the other major carriers have pushed many into bankruptcy. Two that have avoided Chapter 11, AMR Corp.'s American Airlines and Continental Airlines Inc., are expected to finish 2005 in the red. Following losses in 2002 and 2003, Alaska started turning the corner in 2004.

Alaska Air is "big enough to achieve economies of scale, but small enough that little things - such as eliminating paper tickets - can make a difference," said Jamelah Leddy, an analyst with McAdams Wright Ragen in Seattle.

Alaska Air has a good technology track record. Ten years ago, it was the first airline to sell tickets on its own Web site. Today it sells 35 percent of tickets on its site, and 11 percent through other travel sites such as Travelocity, according to Bill Ayer, the chief executive.

"It's always been an interesting company," said consultant Bob Mann, of R.W. Mann & Co. In an industry struggling with crippling labor costs, "they've been ahead of the pack, because they saw competition on the West Coast from Southwest Airlines in the mid-1990s. They knew then that they would have to restructure their costs, and they have maintained a good dialog with their union labor groups."

But analysts disagree on whether the financial health of Alaska Air, the nation's seventh-largest airline by revenue, can provide the fuel to push its stock price higher.

The shares closed Wednesday at $34.04, close to the 52-week high of $35.72 seen on Aug. 3 and a lot better than the low of $25.55 reached April 29.

Analysts, on average, expect earnings of $1.68 a share this year and $3.66 a share next year, according to Thomson Financial. They see revenue of $2.9 billion this year and $3 billion in 2006.

For 2004, Alaska Air lost $15.3 million, or 57 cents a share, on revenue of $2.72 billion.

Ayer said during a recent conference call that the airline is well on the way to meeting its long-term goal for a sustained annual profit margin of 10 percent, with a profit growth rate of 8 percent to 10 percent a year. The airline expects to reach this goal by 2010.

But with fuel and labor costs still overshadowing the industry - and the success of Southwest overshadowing Alaska Airlines - analysts' feelings are mixed: two rate Alaska Air shares a "strong buy," three rate them a "buy," three at "hold" and one at "underperform."

Peter Jacobs, an analyst with the Ragen Mackenzie division of Wells Fargo, has a "neutral" rating on the stock. "If the U.S. economy remains strong, and the price of fuel stabilizes, this could well be a $40 stock next year," he said. "But airline stocks are volatile. It doesn't take much to move them around. So, we are remaining cautious. We've had the best results with airline stocks when we buy them at book value - which for Alaska is $25.50 - and hold them for a while."

With most of its new union labor contracts in place, Alaska's major cost-cutting work has been completed, Jacobs said. "What they have to do now is a thousand little things, like adding technology."

Leddy notes that Alaska Air has "one of the best balance sheets in the airline industry." The airlines' 76 percent debt-to-capitalization ratio is equal to that of JetBlue Airways Corp., but well behind Southwest, the industry leader at 32 percent.

Its strong financial underpinning meant that, following the 2001 terrorist attacks, it could expand operations at a time when other airlines were cutting back service, flying for the first time to cities outside its home turf in the Pacific Northwest.

Alaska recently added flights between Seattle and Dallas, and Los Angeles and Mexico City. Delta Air Lines Inc., now in bankruptcy, had cut its flights there to save money.
Sir James is offline  
Old 11-17-2005, 12:29 AM
  #2  
New boss = Old boss
 
mike734's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Mar 2005
Position: Ca B737
Posts: 2,762
Default

Originally Posted by Sir James
Posted on Thu, Nov. 17, 2005

and they have maintained a good dialog with their union labor groups."

Proof positive that this guy is full of poop. Our labor relations are horrible. I don't know how bad they have to get before an analyst would say so.
mike734 is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
mike734
Alaska
42
01-12-2022 12:10 AM
SkyHigh
Major
13
02-28-2008 11:36 AM
Sir James
Major
1
07-17-2005 08:47 PM
WatchThis!
Major
0
07-10-2005 03:55 PM
Freight Dog
Major
1
05-02-2005 07:01 PM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Your Privacy Choices