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61 of 73 new markets lose money for SWA

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So they have spent 1.4B a year during those times, minimum, for new airplanes. Where is the high debt to show for it? The debt to equity is still way low. It went up for about a year and is now back down.

Answer--They are racking up assets as they increase debt. A low debt to equity operation. Works great in a rising interest rate environment and reduces the need to lease airplanes and equipment. Which, over the long term, is expensive.

NO NO NO! You have it all backasswards. Southwest has a Low Debt/Equity ratio which is a GOOD thing if you are trying to asses financial security of a company. Southwest has a D/E (1.6B debt/6.5B equity) of about 0.25 which means that SWA's debt is about 1/4 the size of it's equity (owners value). Compare that to AMR which has a D/E (12.7B debt/226M equity) of about 56.1, which means that AMR's Debt is 56 times as large as it's equity. In other words if you liquidated SWA and AMR today, SWA would pay all it's debts and be able to return money to it's shareholders, AMR wouldn't be able to pay all of it's debts and shareholders would get ZERO - 56 times over.

The mistake a lot of you are making is to equate stock-price/performance to career security. The things that an investor is looking for is not necessarilly the same as what a pilot would be looking for if they are trying to assess the long-term viability of a company. To an investor, too low of a D/E means that the company has not been aggresive enough in obtaining debt, which means the company will not benefit as greatly from upturns in the market as a company like AMR that is more highly leveraged.

An analogy I can think of is...two pilots buy a house at the same time with a 30 year mortgage...

Conservative pilot - 1 takes all his extra cash and puts it towards his principal. In 15 years say...he has his house paid off. He has 100% equity in a total of one house. His house payment at the end of the 15 years is $0.

Aggresive pilot - 2 takes all his extra cash and saves it for a down payment on a 2nd house. Every time he accumulates enough for a down payment in either equity from appreciation or cash he buys another house. At the end of 15 years - he probably owns 20 % of 10 houses. His house payments might be $30,000 a month - I hope he has great tenants.

How did they do? What the market did in the 15 years is irrelevant to pilot 1, conservative pilot-1 would be okay he's not rich, but he is living free and clear in his very own home. Aggresive pilot -2 would have done OUTSTANDING in an Up Market, and HORRIBBLY in a Down market.

SWA is like conservative pilot-1, AMR is like aggresive pilot-2.

Analyst/investors would like SWA to act more like aggresive pilot2 then the conservative pilot-1 they have been acting like in the past.
 
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just reread BBJ's post,

I'll back off a little - your post wasn't backasswards - but I do disagree with you when you imply that a low d/e is a bad thing - at least from a pilot/career perspective.

later
 
NO NO NO! You have it all backasswards. Southwest has a Low Debt/Equity ratio which is a GOOD thing if you are trying to asses financial security of a company.

Not completely true.

LUV pays for assets with after-tax money, instead of using other people's money and deducting the cost of the interest from taxes. Kind of like your example, but instead where two pilots invest in the stock market for retirement, one uses a 401(k) (before tax money) and the other uses after tax money. Which one has more in the end?

In a capital-intensive industry, LUV is severely "under-leveraged', paying far, far too much to Uncle Sam in taxes every year. Hence the possibility of a buyout, someone who knows how to utilize tax strategy could increase cash flow significantly simply by changing the debt ratio.
 
An analogy I can think of is...two pilots buy a house at the same time with a 30 year mortgage...

Conservative pilot - 1 takes all his extra cash and puts it towards his principal. In 15 years say...he has his house paid off. He has 100% equity in a total of one house. His house payment at the end of the 15 years is $0.

Aggresive pilot - 2 takes all his extra cash and saves it for a down payment on a 2nd house. Every time he accumulates enough for a down payment in either equity from appreciation or cash he buys another house. At the end of 15 years - he probably owns 20 % of 10 houses. His house payments might be $30,000 a month - I hope he has great tenants.

How did they do? What the market did in the 15 years is irrelevant to pilot 1, conservative pilot-1 would be okay he's not rich, but he is living free and clear in his very own home. Aggresive pilot -2 would have done OUTSTANDING in an Up Market, and HORRIBBLY in a Down market.

SWA is like conservative pilot-1, AMR is like aggresive pilot-2.

Analyst/investors would like SWA to act more like aggresive pilot2 then the conservative pilot-1 they have been acting like in the past.

Interesting analogy. Let's say though, for argument's sake, that pilot-1 also buys ten houses, but pays cash for all of them. Now move down the road 30 years, and how did they do? How much money did pilot-1 save in interest?
 
Interest is deductible. LUV doesn't use this deduction as much as others, so it's cash flow is lower than it could be.

An LBO would allow a greater tax deduction. It's as simple as that. More cash for the owners using a more aggressive tax policy.

Debt isn't "good" or "bad", it needs to be engineered to gain the most cash flow without risking the whole enterprise.

Because again, interest is deductible.
 
Interest is deductible. LUV doesn't use this deduction as much as others, so it's cash flow is lower than it could be.

An LBO would allow a greater tax deduction. It's as simple as that. More cash for the owners using a more aggressive tax policy.

Debt isn't "good" or "bad", it needs to be engineered to gain the most cash flow without risking the whole enterprise.

Because again, interest is deductible.

True, But pilot-1 has still saved a TON of money, even after the deductions. This is along the same lines as the argument that when you get a raise you should run out and buy a more expensive house, to get a bigger deduction. When in reality, you would be much better off just paying the extra in taxes and investing the difference.

I will not pretend to be an accountant, or an airline CEO, as there are many reasons why I'm not. I'm just pointing out the fact that debt itself is a LARGE expense, especially over the long term, and should be considered. Interest is indeed deductible, but still costs money.
 
Are you trying to draw attention away from your ginormous a$$ again
I couldn't care less about this thread but I sure hope this isn't accurate because I remember seeing a fine one, well at least when I saw it at C's years ago. ;)
 
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I will not pretend to be an accountant, or an airline CEO, as there are many reasons why I'm not. I'm just pointing out the fact that debt itself is a LARGE expense, especially over the long term, and should be considered. Interest is indeed deductible, but still costs money.

Well, it's probably best you are not trying to present yourself as an accountant, because you missed a huge difference. Assets generate revenue in business. Your house example is wrong, unless it was a rental property that brought in positive cash flow. If so, you would want to "lever", or borrow against it as much as possible, allowing Uncle Sam to help pay for it. Do real estate developers save up and put 65% down payment? That's what SWA is doing.

This really does come down to tax strategy, and all of the metaphors about pilots/credit cards/houses don't fit when you're talking about cash-generating assets. LUV uses after-tax cash, which is expensive. Why do they do this? Nobody knows. It seems "safer", but that insurance policy is costing tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars per year.
 
Well, it's probably best you are not trying to present yourself as an accountant, because you missed a huge difference. Assets generate revenue in business. Your house example is wrong, unless it was a rental property that brought in positive cash flow. If so, you would want to "lever", or borrow against it as much as possible, allowing Uncle Sam to help pay for it. Do real estate developers save up and put 65% down payment? That's what SWA is doing.

This really does come down to tax strategy, and all of the metaphors about pilots/credit cards/houses don't fit when you're talking about cash-generating assets. LUV uses after-tax cash, which is expensive. Why do they do this? Nobody knows. It seems "safer", but that insurance policy is costing tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars per year.

Uncle Sam isn't helping to pay for the house!! He's helping you pay the interest on the loan against it. And not all of it. The loan still costs you money. But really, nevermind. Believe me, I'm the first to admit that I'm not an expert on this stuff... Hmmm, I always thought that a company being low on debt was a GOOD thing, and that an airline that owes fifteen times what it's worth was a bad thing...
 
I always thought that a company being low on debt was a GOOD thing, and that an airline that owes fifteen times what it's worth was a bad thing...


You're making the mistake of choosing "good" or "bad" when it comes to a straightforward tax strategy, low debt isn't good, high debt isn't bad, like there's some sliding schedule.

Public companies are valued on free cash flow and by using after tax dollars, LUV has reduced its free cash flow, which lowers the stock price.

Make sure not to compare corporate debt with consumer credit card debt, they're two different animals and paying Uncle Sam more than you have to is dangerous--it leads to LBOs by guys who can do a better job on tax strategy.
 
Hmm...

Gents-

I don't know if it's been covered yet, as I don't have time to mull over 7 pages of greatness in this thread, but I would encourage everyone to go to finance.google.com and take a look at LUV. Now look at the news items there on the right side bar...what do you see? A story dated June 5th that calls for slower expansion at SWA and exudes gloom and doom. Now look at the June 8th story..."Investor Hopes Climb for Southwest." Three days and all is right with the world?? Shocking! And thus, the stock climbed.

My point is, do not base the longterm viability of a company on what these analysts are saying. Their view is very shortterm (3 days?), as that's where the quick, big money is made in the stock market. Essentially, they are doing their darndest to get this stock to work for them. They know those 61 unprofitable markets will eventually make money, and if they were able to buy the stock at $14, well, you do the math...
 
You're making the mistake of choosing "good" or "bad" when it comes to a straightforward tax strategy, low debt isn't good, high debt isn't bad, like there's some sliding schedule.

Public companies are valued on free cash flow and by using after tax dollars, LUV has reduced its free cash flow, which lowers the stock price.

Make sure not to compare corporate debt with consumer credit card debt, they're two different animals and paying Uncle Sam more than you have to is dangerous--it leads to LBOs by guys who can do a better job on tax strategy.

I still disagree. Debt leverages a company - If a company is making a lot of money - it makes a lot more money if it is highly leveraged. But the reverse is also true - a highly leveraged company will lose a lot more money then a company with a conservative balance sheet.

If you are a stock-picker - then you are exactly right - a company with too little debt is not the best choice. This works fine for a stock investor who can get in and out of a stock at will. When things are going great - you buy the stock, when things start going south real fast, you sell it and find something else to buy.

This doesn't work if you are a pilot trying to determine the viability of the company you work for. Once you are there it is not so easy to change when things go south.

This is why Southwest has always had the highest credit rating of any airline, but the stock has not done very well.

Pull up the stock charts since 9/11 and compare LUV to AMR.

Pre 9/11 LUV = $20 AMR = $20
after 9/11 LUV = $15 AMR = $1.25
Recently LUV = $14.50 AMR = $26.13

That wild ride that AMR's stock took was/is due to it's highly leveraged position.

Now think about the experience of the pilots at these two airlines immediatelly before, during, after the mess of 9/11.

SWA - never furloughed - only stopped hiring for a very short while. Upgrade to CA in 5 years.

AMR - HUGE ammount of hiring right before 9/11, HUGE ammount of furloughs after 9/11, only began recalling this year. Upgrade? - what upgrade?

So...if you are a pilot-looking for job security, a low D/E is GOOD and a high D/E is BAD.

As far as the value of a company is concerned - FCF is only one of the things that drive a stock price. In fact - I doubt FCF is looked at much to value SWA except to the extent that it feeds takeover speculation. FCF is more directly corelated to stock price at companies that pay high dividends or have a habbit of acquiring companies. The more FCF a company has, the more money it has to do things like pay higher dividends or acquire other companies. SWA isn't either of these.

I also disagree with your assessment that "corporate debt" is different then "consumer credit card debt". Debt is debt, it's the terms of the debt that is important. If a company is paying 15% or an individual is paying 15% - interest doesn't care who is paying.

The danger with debt is that it exacerbates bad decisions. Consumer Debt has such a bad reputation because most consumers make stupid decisions with what Assets to buy with that debt - new car, new stereo. If that same consumer used that debt in a smarter way - you could make the same arguments for consumers also.

If you maxed out your visa and bought $10,000 worth of AMR stock in January 2003 for $1.25 a share you would have got 8,000 shares which today would be worth $209,000. You would have used leverage (high D/E) to your great advantage. On the other hand, if AMR did end up filing bankruptcy which was the fear - and why the stock price at the time was so low - you would have lost all $10,000 and would be paying interest on $10,000 debt today.

Low D/E = boring = probably not going to get huge returns on the stock.

High D/E = exciting = potential for high returns/huge losses on the stock. But again - not relevant to job seekers.

Later
 
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Conservative pilot - 1 takes all his extra cash and puts it towards his principal. In 15 years say...he has his house paid off. He has 100% equity in a total of one house. His house payment at the end of the 15 years is $0.

Aggresive pilot - 2 takes all his extra cash and saves it for a down payment on a 2nd house. Every time he accumulates enough for a down payment in either equity from appreciation or cash he buys another house. At the end of 15 years - he probably owns 20 % of 10 houses. His house payments might be $30,000 a month - I hope he has great tenants.

Not that it relates directly to the SWA D/E ratio debate at hand (which is making my head hurt), but there's a third strategy these pilots could choose. They could pay off their mortgages more quickly without ever paying more, thus allowing them to build equity faster, and/or reduce debt much more rapidly. Pilot 1 could own the house in seven years instead of 15, never having paid extra (not even the extra he was going to pay in order to pay it off in 15 years). Pilot 2 could own the 10 houses without the $30,000/mo in mortgage payments, making any rent pure profit. Check out the link below for details . . . it's not BS or a scam, just a mathematical work-around for the lender-centered U.S. mortgage system.
 
Not that it relates directly to the SWA D/E ratio debate at hand (which is making my head hurt), but there's a third strategy these pilots could choose. They could pay off their mortgages more quickly without ever paying more, thus allowing them to build equity faster, and/or reduce debt much more rapidly. Pilot 1 could own the house in seven years instead of 15, never having paid extra (not even the extra he was going to pay in order to pay it off in 15 years). Pilot 2 could own the 10 houses without the $30,000/mo in mortgage payments, making any rent pure profit. Check out the link below for details . . . it's not BS or a scam, just a mathematical work-around for the lender-centered U.S. mortgage system.

You're ignoring the appreciation of the houses. If I "lever", by using huge debt, a very expensive house and deduct the mortgage interest every year off of my income and Joe conservative pilot buys a much smaller house (because debt is "bad") and pays off the house early...

Both our houses appreciate at the same rate, so at the end of 20 years, I have a much more valuable house, I have shielded a ton of income from the IRS. Who has more at the end? I do. Plus I had a bigger house all along.

It may seem counter-intuitive, but the math works out.

The same is not true with credit cards, what you purchase with them does not appreciate and the interest is not deductable, lose/lose. But when Uncle Sam helps pay your interest payment, take advantage of it.

In fact, there might be as much as a 20% drop in corporate taxes collected by the US due to all of the "levering" of companies by private equity players taking advantage of the tax law. This was in today's WSJ.
 
I completely agree with your comment on credit cards . . . their only use is accumulation of reward points and short-term float of expenses. Also, I'd imagine the stats you paraphrase from the WSJ regarding corporate taxes are pretty valid. I guess I don't understand how that's relative to our personal finances. What "Joe conservative pilot" believes about good debt versus bad debt isn't the issue. I understand that mortgage debt is 'good' debt when compared to credit cards and car loans, but it's still debt with a large monthly payment. If Joe wants to keep good debt, he can buy another property . . . and pay that off quickly, as well. As for the appreciation of the houses . . . it will be what it will be, no matter the paydown strategy. However you look at it . . . leveraging, 'Uncle Sam helping you pay your interest', etc . . . you're going to pay $3 in interest to save $1 in income tax liability. And that's if you're in the highest tax bracket . . . if you're not, the math is even worse. As for leveraging, the MMA (the program I'm talking about, link below) allows you to leverage the bank's money against your mortgage. During the shortened paydown period of the mortgage, your spending doesn't change, so you can still do whatever you've been doing with your discretionary income. Then, when the mortgage is gone, you can employ whatever strategy you like with all the money you're not paying to your mortgage lender that you would've otherwise.




Sorry for the thread hijack, everyone . . . I just feel that we've been so well trained for so long by the mortgage lenders in the U.S., everybody needs to know there's a better way to do this! The banks in Europe and Australia offer products like the MMA from the get go, and have for decades . . . U.S. banks don't. Please carry on with the doom and gloom for all those beleaguered SWA employees. :)
 
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NO NO NO! You have it all backasswards. Southwest has a Low Debt/Equity ratio which is a GOOD thing if you are trying to asses financial security of a company.

SWA is like conservative pilot-1, AMR is like aggresive pilot-2.

Analyst/investors would like SWA to act more like aggresive pilot2 then the conservative pilot-1 they have been acting like in the past.

No, No, No eh? You have got the wrong guy if you think I don't know it's a good thing to have low debt. And thanks for the lecture on the use of leverage using the "easy" to understand analogy method.

SWA is conservative? Yes and no. They have been growing at 8% recently. 30-35 planes/year. They have increased their fleet by 200 planes the last 6 years. That is aggressive growth fueled partly by conservative accounting.

AMR has been shrinking since 2001. All with the "aggressive" debt they accumulated during the go-go 1990's. The debt has been an albatross hanging around their neck and they have been struggling to make debt AND pension payments. So it has caused them to be more conservative. Go figure.

So I say to you-- No, No, No. SWA is the aggressive one and AMR is the conservative one. Go ask the AMR furloughes from 1999 hire classes.
 
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I think that looking here would show you which carrier has been aggressive and what leverage can do.

You confuse company performance and stock performance.

Coming from the brink of BK will make the stock soar. It doesn't reflect any growth or aggressive company performance.
 

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