Q3 2023 Earnings
#91
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 314
Likes: 1
Reading this thread it's a bit scary to see how many pilots don't have the slightest understanding how their industry works. And they are happy to put that on full display here. Lots of amateur route planners too... lol! Best to stick to your wheelhouse in order to not be thought an idiot.
Full planes =/= making money is a good first lesson in airline economics.
Full planes =/= making money is a good first lesson in airline economics.
#92
The REAL Bluedriver
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,935
Likes: 0
From: Airbus Capt
As for Delta making 75% from premium cabins, they most likely aren't losing money in the main cabin.
NK was profitable in the past, without premium cabins. Something has changed fundamentally.
I don't mean any of that as a dig on NK crews. JB has its own challenges to work through... I believe they are fundamentally different, but challenges nonetheless. I still think the two airlines coming together will help address each airlines challenges simultaneously. Just need to make it through the crap-storm and come out the other side.
#93
[QUOTE=Bluedriver;3716980]It doesn't work that way, at all.
Once the airline sets it's flight schedule for the quarter, it's variable costs largely become fixed costs, which gets added to traditional fixed costs. The main costs that are still variable are unexpected mx events and IROPs.
That's one side of the equation. On the revenue side, ticket prices can vary wildly depending on demand. It's the main reason that some quarters are traditionally higher margin quarters than others. But even beyond seasonality of demand, demand itself isn't fixed. If demand for your product is lower than expected either due to reputational stress from past IROPs, or poor customer service, or stress on the socioeconomic class your airline caters to, or even just the general economic cycle of the nation, the airline has to discount tickets to fill the seats. The average fare one month could be $140, the average fare in another month could be $90, even for the same flight schedule. In those two examples the fixed and variable costs remain very similar, but the revenue (money from fares and ancillaries) are dramatically different. So even if the load factors were the same ("my flights were full"), the difference is profitable or not profitable.
Spirit and Frontier have both made public statements recently about "heavy promotional activity and discounts" to fill the seats. That is why full flights aren't guaranteed to be profitable.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/sp...ivity-123dd758[/QUOTE]
This is actually a good explanation. I do remember reading an article a couple years back saying that ULCCs main catalyst for profits are ancillaries. Those full flight had quite a bit of bags, but no one has insider knowledge of the books. It just feels wrong to have that many pax and bags and not turn a profit.
Once the airline sets it's flight schedule for the quarter, it's variable costs largely become fixed costs, which gets added to traditional fixed costs. The main costs that are still variable are unexpected mx events and IROPs.
That's one side of the equation. On the revenue side, ticket prices can vary wildly depending on demand. It's the main reason that some quarters are traditionally higher margin quarters than others. But even beyond seasonality of demand, demand itself isn't fixed. If demand for your product is lower than expected either due to reputational stress from past IROPs, or poor customer service, or stress on the socioeconomic class your airline caters to, or even just the general economic cycle of the nation, the airline has to discount tickets to fill the seats. The average fare one month could be $140, the average fare in another month could be $90, even for the same flight schedule. In those two examples the fixed and variable costs remain very similar, but the revenue (money from fares and ancillaries) are dramatically different. So even if the load factors were the same ("my flights were full"), the difference is profitable or not profitable.
Spirit and Frontier have both made public statements recently about "heavy promotional activity and discounts" to fill the seats. That is why full flights aren't guaranteed to be profitable.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/sp...ivity-123dd758[/QUOTE]
This is actually a good explanation. I do remember reading an article a couple years back saying that ULCCs main catalyst for profits are ancillaries. Those full flight had quite a bit of bags, but no one has insider knowledge of the books. It just feels wrong to have that many pax and bags and not turn a profit.
#94
The REAL Bluedriver
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,935
Likes: 0
From: Airbus Capt
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/sp...ivity-123dd758
This is actually a good explanation. I do remember reading an article a couple years back saying that ULCCs main catalyst for profits are ancillaries. Those full flight had quite a bit of bags, but no one has insider knowledge of the books. It just feels wrong to have that many pax and bags and not turn a profit.
This is actually a good explanation. I do remember reading an article a couple years back saying that ULCCs main catalyst for profits are ancillaries. Those full flight had quite a bit of bags, but no one has insider knowledge of the books. It just feels wrong to have that many pax and bags and not turn a profit.
When demand is low, as has been reported by both NK and F9, the airline can either sell less tickets at their normal fare, or sell more tickets but at a discounted rate. Either way the result is less revenue. Generally they would discount the fare to try and fill more seats, and hope that it's more opportunities at up selling ancillary revenue.
But it's clear that fare revenue is down significantly, and ancillary revenue hasn't been enough to make up the deficit.
F9 reports total revenue for the 3rd quarter 2023 as being down 3% from the same quarter in 2022. That doesn't sound like much, but that total revenue was on TWENTY PERCENT HIGHER capacity vs Q3 2022. So they flew 20% more seats than a year ago, but took in less total revenue than the same quarter a year ago! Their load factor was only down slightly, so that means the tickets are selling at a big discount.
#95
Again and again, “turning a profit” is not the main goal of a growth company like Spirit. And everyone has insider knowledge of the books, it’s a publicly traded company.
There are other key financial metrics to focus on. With the parked aircraft this year, our Q3 fleet size is nearly identical to the fleet size in Q3 of 2022. The total operating revenue for Q3 was just under $1.3 billion which is down 6.7% from the revenue in Q3 last year. That difference represents the softening demand this year.
When you look at that revenue per passenger, it shows we made 13% less per passenger this year vs last. Translation: we flew more people but didn’t charge them as much money.
The other interesting thing is that when you further break down that average revenue per passenger, the seat fare portion was down, but the ancillary revenue went up slightly, and accounts for 58% of our revenue per passenger. We are making money on bags/etc, but aren’t able to charge as much for the seats in order to compete in this time of lower domestic demand.
Aircraft utilization was actually slightly higher than it was a year ago, but not by much.
Operating costs were also higher than they were last year, and yes we lost money this quarter, but pilot “feelings” about profitability are certainly not what determines the viability of the ULCC model.
#96
The REAL Bluedriver
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,935
Likes: 0
From: Airbus Capt
This is actually a good explanation. I do remember reading an article a couple years back saying that ULCCs main catalyst for profits are ancillaries. Those full flight had quite a bit of bags, but no one has insider knowledge of the books. It just feels wrong to have that many pax and bags and not turn a profit.
Again and again, “turning a profit” is not the main goal of a growth company like Spirit. And everyone has insider knowledge of the books, it’s a publicly traded company.
There are other key financial metrics to focus on. With the parked aircraft this year, our Q3 fleet size is nearly identical to the fleet size in Q3 of 2022. The total operating revenue for Q3 was just under $1.3 billion which is down 6.7% from the revenue in Q3 last year. That difference represents the softening demand this year.
When you look at that revenue per passenger, it shows we made 13% less per passenger this year vs last. Translation: we flew more people but didn’t charge them as much money.
The other interesting thing is that when you further break down that average revenue per passenger, the seat fare portion was down, but the ancillary revenue went up slightly, and accounts for 58% of our revenue per passenger. We are making money on bags/etc, but aren’t able to charge as much for the seats in order to compete in this time of lower domestic demand.
Aircraft utilization was actually slightly higher than it was a year ago, but not by much.
Operating costs were also higher than they were last year, and yes we lost money this quarter, but pilot “feelings” about profitability are certainly not what determines the viability of the ULCC model.
Again and again, “turning a profit” is not the main goal of a growth company like Spirit. And everyone has insider knowledge of the books, it’s a publicly traded company.
There are other key financial metrics to focus on. With the parked aircraft this year, our Q3 fleet size is nearly identical to the fleet size in Q3 of 2022. The total operating revenue for Q3 was just under $1.3 billion which is down 6.7% from the revenue in Q3 last year. That difference represents the softening demand this year.
When you look at that revenue per passenger, it shows we made 13% less per passenger this year vs last. Translation: we flew more people but didn’t charge them as much money.
The other interesting thing is that when you further break down that average revenue per passenger, the seat fare portion was down, but the ancillary revenue went up slightly, and accounts for 58% of our revenue per passenger. We are making money on bags/etc, but aren’t able to charge as much for the seats in order to compete in this time of lower domestic demand.
Aircraft utilization was actually slightly higher than it was a year ago, but not by much.
Operating costs were also higher than they were last year, and yes we lost money this quarter, but pilot “feelings” about profitability are certainly not what determines the viability of the ULCC model.
#97
Line Holder
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 467
Likes: 70
Spirit was solidly profitable prior to COVID, and that was while Spirit was a "growth" company. F9 is CLEARLY a "growth" company, yet it's stock has been beaten down to almost nothing because it isn't reporting meaningful profits. And even during the post -COVID strong domestic demand, the ULCCs and LCCs recovered the worst. So I don't think it's anyone's "feelings" that the ULCC model isn't scaling in the US, it is becoming evident.
It may be temporary, something might change down the road and tilt the scales back in favor of ULCC’s. But certainly, as it stands, this is a troubling trend,
#98
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Nov 2020
Posts: 2,248
Likes: 103
Spirit was solidly profitable prior to COVID, and that was while Spirit was a "growth" company. F9 is CLEARLY a "growth" company, yet it's stock has been beaten down to almost nothing because it isn't reporting meaningful profits. And even during the post -COVID strong domestic demand, the ULCCs and LCCs recovered the worst. So I don't think it's anyone's "feelings" that the ULCC model isn't scaling in the US, it is becoming evident.
If the ulccs can operate reliably for a dedicated period perhaps they can overcome that public perception.
#99
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Joined: Dec 2022
Posts: 1,372
Likes: 141
Actually mortgaged our FF program to the hilt during CovID. I imagine we can’t borrow on it anymore. What’s left for collateral to borrow more money if the merger gets scuttled. I don’t see much.
#100
Spirit was solidly profitable prior to COVID, and that was while Spirit was a "growth" company. F9 is CLEARLY a "growth" company, yet its dstock has been beaten down to almost nothing because it isn't reporting meaningful profits. And even during the post -COVID strong domestic demand, the ULCCs and LCCs recovered the worst. So I don't think it's anyone's "feelings" that the ULCC model isn't scaling in the US, it is becoming evident.
This is not about a flawed ULCC model or premium cabin superiority, this is about some pretty egregious government spending and subsequent Fed actions that’s about to bite the economy pretty hard.
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