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Granted, SkyWest is not Southwest, but given the industry, that's a good margin.
704 aircraft make SkyWest, Inc. the fourth lagest airline entity in the world, behind Delta (726), Lufthansa (et al.) (722) and United (710).
Sounds like you just creamed your dispatcher keyboard. Clean up for the next guy, would ya?
704 aircraft make SkyWest, Inc. the fourth lagest airline entity in the world, behind Delta (726), Lufthansa (et al.) (722) and United (710).
704 aircraft make SkyWest, Inc. the fourth lagest airline entity in the world, behind Delta (726), Lufthansa (et al.) (722) and United (710).
Just stating a fact, oh glorious bus driver.
Nothing glorified about it, spooge monkey. Get back to your job of being the flight crew's biyatch.
Glad there is all that metal over there. With oil heading up we sure could use some scrape for beer cans.
Move SkyWest INC. to the MAJORS Board....
$804 million in cash
704 Aircraft.
On Your Six said:If oil stays high
It won't - oil is up on geopolitical concerns (read that as FEAR), not any actual substantive decrease in output from OPEC member countries.
As long as nobody shoots at Israel, oil will likely come back down in the 80-90/bbl trading range inside of 6 months.
Why would you need scrape for beer cans nimnuts?
Hopefully it doesn't come to that. Check the uptrend through the recession professor. EM growth still has alot to run over the next 20 years. I'm all for bringing more supply to beer cans especially if it downsizes Uncle Jerry's Super Best Friends Club.
http://www.infomine.com/chartsanddata/chartbuilder.aspx?z=f&g=127675&dr=3y
80 is still too high for RJs. It needs to be below 50 for the 50 seaters. Think of you guys as Alamo Rental with a bunch of 1990 Ford Tauruses. Analysts and passengers hate them, and Mainline CEOs are starting to join the party too. A particular CEO just bragged during a conference call that he had parked 120 of them, and more are on they way out. Mainline scope won't get any more loose to allow you to replace all of them with larger planes too. Not good for you. Enjoy the pile of cash for now. Buying up the competition (XJT and ASA) is just temporarily delaying the inevitable.
OYS
80 is still too high for RJs. It needs to be below 50 for the 50 seaters. Think of you guys as Alamo Rental with a bunch of 1990 Ford Tauruses. Analysts and passengers hate them, and Mainline CEOs are starting to join the party too. A particular CEO just bragged during a conference call that he had parked 120 of them, and more are on they way out. Mainline scope won't get any more loose to allow you to replace all of them with larger planes too. Not good for you. Enjoy the pile of cash for now. Buying up the competition (XJT and ASA) is just temporarily delaying the inevitable.
450 of those planes are unprofitable with high oil prices. If oil stays high, they could be parked. The cash pile would shrink.
OYS
Unfortunately, the payroll of the employees does not reflect in an equal manner.
Therefore, we are still just a regional airline.
No wait, a SUPER REGIONAL AIRLINE!!!
Really? It seems to me both Delta and Skywest were profitable last quarter. So those 450 airplanes must not be doing that bad for both companies. Fuel is not everything. Other than fuel, operational costs are a lot lower on the Skywest side than the Delta side. If oil stays high or climbs higher, the recession will deepen again, and Delta could be parking lots of airplanes.
If oil spikes too high and is sustained for any length of time it will crush the world economy and the price of oil will drop to super low.
Not only will Regionals park airplanes, but Majors, etc.. will join the party too.