Lampshade
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2002
- Posts
- 485
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Should have been new routes:um, we don't serve 73 markets and we have only added 5 or 6 markets since 2003 - somebody doesn't know what they are talking about
SWA is building it's fleet as though someone is going out of business in the next few years. You think that's going to happen?Swa has lost money one quarter in the last 30 years. It has never lost money two quarters in a row since it turned profitable.
If the current market is such that SWA is going to turn unprofitable then the rest are toast.
The truth is the article is an example of statistics lying. For accounting purposes, new markets get front loaded with a lot of startup expenses, marketing, advertising, tenent improvements, et-cetera. Taking over abandoned markets to grab total market share is expensive on the short term and very profitable over the long term. Fortunately, SWA can afford to be patient. The highly profitable markets in California that are supposedly carrying the system were originally started this same way and were technically losers at first. This isn't the first rodeo for the management team of SWA.
OK!Lowecur,
The Shinola goes on the top...
SW has never been non-operationally profitable since then, get your facts straight. Last year SW deliveredSwa has lost money one quarter in the last 30 years. It has never lost money two quarters in a row since it turned profitable.
SW has never been non-operationally profitable since then, get your facts straight. Last year SW delivered
+$499 million operating profit
-$1.399 billion on equipment
-$809 million in stock buyback.
+ about $700 million on fuel options
total loss of $1 billion last year.
This year they are already down $500 million. They will need a loan to pay for the rest of their aircraft deliveries, or they can enter the payments into the cash flow and go into the red operationally.
Swa has lost money one quarter in the last 30 years. It has never lost money two quarters in a row since it turned profitable.
If the current market is such that SWA is going to turn unprofitable then the rest are toast.
The truth is the article is an example of statistics lying. For accounting purposes, new markets get front loaded with a lot of startup expenses, marketing, advertising, tenent improvements, et-cetera. Taking over abandoned markets to grab total market share is expensive on the short term and very profitable over the long term. Fortunately, SWA can afford to be patient. The highly profitable markets in California that are supposedly carrying the system were originally started this same way and were technically losers at first. This isn't the first rodeo for the management team of SWA.
I don't even understand your question..... business purchases including aircraft are part of a corporate cash flow. If SW is out of cash on hand for paying for their liabilities they will have to take on long term debt. Certain transactions they pay cash for can't be moved into long term debt because they are ongoing expenses, i.e. advertising, perishables, etc. Southwest isn't the official carrier of the NFL for free ya know.Wow, Warren Buffet you aren't, that's for sure.
Where again do balance-sheet transactions enter into the above-the-line operating profit again?
Don't answer, you'll embarass yourself further.