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I don't know if I would compare United 2000 and Southwest 2013. Southwest's current balance sheet is stronger than United's even in 2000 not to mention that Southwest has zero pension obligations to fund.
Please show your work! Are you a FOQA gatekeeper at BOTH airlines? Where are you coming up with this data? Is it published somewhere? I've never seen FOQA data from multiple airlines published side by side ANYWHERE! If you have access to this data, please share it with the rest of us. Other than factual data to back up your assertions I will assume you are just making it up.
In all honesty can you say with a straight face that Airtran formerly Value Jet was in even the same class as Southwest?
How many books have been written about Airtran? How many college professors used airtran as examples of how to run a successful business? How many Business leaders tried to mimic Airtran to run their business successfully? Let me help you with those answers. NONE!
When you told people you worked for Airtran how many times did you have to explain who the hell Airtran was?
Don't worry as a new Southwest purchase you will never have to do that again as most people will now smile at you and say how much they love Southwest.
What a joke! In other words, "I can't publish the data because I don't have it. I am simply making this stuff up as I go."Are you even an airline pilot ? "Please share it with us ?" ..... If you're interested then I suggest you contact the gatekeepers or Flight Ops and find out for yourself.
Both airlines have access to each others FOQA data. Publish it on FI yourself. Farkin Muppet..
You love to talk about the balance sheet and the lack of pension obligations, but you consistently ignore all of the other metrics important for judging the health of a company and its capacity for growth. Whether you look at operating margin, net margin, return on equity, return on assets, or virtually any other metric used to judge the effectiveness of management, SWA is performing atrociously, and has been for some time. Yes, SWA has plenty of money sitting around (by airline standards). But the problem is that management doesn't seem to have the slightest clue what to do with all of that cash to create shareholder value. Shareholders would be smarter to put their money in a CD rather than giving it to Gary to sit on for the next decade. And just as the shareholders get screwed by Gary's inability to produce value, so do the employees get screwed by career stagnation.
In 2007, Seeking Alpha was the recipient of Forbes Best of the Web Award and was selected by Kiplinger's as its pick for Best Investment Informant. In 2011 Seeking Alpha was listed as #1 in Inc. Magazine's list of Essential Economic blogs. This is what they have to say about LUV stock in December 0f 2012:The Southwest that you describe is yesterday's news. No business leaders are trying to mimic SWA today. SWA is the poster child for failing to deliver shareholder value.
B) trying to convince 6 anonymous AT hard liners.
Just know C) if you're from another carrier and GK loses his mind again and decides to spend the profit of our collective efforts buying you, don't expect as good a deal as AT got.
Everybody knows the following:
1) A great guy and a great pilot that interviewed and got hired at SWA.
2) A person who is personality challenged and aeronautically disfunctional who interview with SWA and got hired
3) A great guy and a great pilot who had all the tickets with all the type ratings who interviewed and did not get hired.
Since you work at SWA you are #1 or #2. You be the judge.
Guess what? You are just like every other airline. Every HR department has their nuances and quirks. Just because they told you that they hired "only the best" when you showed up to day 1 of initial training does not make it so. If you believed that line then you are probably leaning towards the #2 example above.
If you can look at yourself in the mirror and laugh at yourself then you have enough modesty to realize that SWA is not infallible. SWA needs to look at the procedures and practices and evolve into an airline that will continue to grow in technology and the aircraft they fly and the way that they operate.
If you continue to believe that you are the "best of the best" you will continue down the primrose path to your own destruction. Your choice.
In 2007, Seeking Alpha was the recipient of Forbes Best of the Web Award and was selected by Kiplinger's as its pick for Best Investment Informant. In 2011 Seeking Alpha was listed as #1 in Inc. Magazine's list of Essential Economic blogs. This is what they have to say about LUV stock in December 0f 2012:
"Southwest Airlines (LUV) is the largest and most well-managed airline in the United States. The company has 40 years of history and is known for its low-fare, high-quality air service. The company is repeatedly cited in case histories in business school for being an exceptionally well-run company. The stock price has shown great strength over the previous quarter. The company is likely to grow earnings, and analysts remain upbeat on forward growth."
Maybe they are right, maybe they are wrong, who knows but I definitely feel better about believing their assessment about the relative merits of LUV stock than yours.
Southwest Airlines Is The Best Transportation Play
http://seekingalpha.com/article/1065941-southwest-airlines-is-the-best-transportation-play
Really?The Southwest that you describe is yesterday's news. No business leaders are trying to mimic SWA today. SWA is the poster child for failing to deliver shareholder value.
."
Motley fool:
The airline industry has a singular talent for draining the pockets of well-intentioned investors. Highly leveraged balance sheets and bankruptcies are the norm. Significant labor costs and unpredictable jet fuel prices wreak havoc on variable costs. Yet some airlines generate solid returns quarter after quarter. Alaska Air Group (NYSE: ALK ) , Ryanair (NASDAQ: RYAAY ) , Southwest Airlines (NYSE: LUV ) , and Copa Holdings (NYSE: CPA )
Very little has been in the news lately about the best-performing airline in recent history, Southwest Airlines (NYSE: LUV). With the company set to report its first quarter results on April 25, I thought a little reminder about this great company was in order.
<H2>Key Statistics
</H2>Forward P/E (1 yr):10.71P/S (ttm):0.56Ex-Dividend Date:05-Mar-13
? More Key Statistics
Analysts
Annual EPS Est (Dec-13) :0.98Quarterly EPS Est (Mar-13) :0.03Mean Recommendation*:2.6PEG Ratio (5 yr expected):0.45
* (Strong Buy) 1.0 - 5.0 (Sell)
Shareholders would be smarter to put their money in a CD rather than giving it to Gary to sit on for the next decade.
"Maybe you should call Warren Buffett, he seems to disagree."
Warren is a very smart guy and he says this: ?the worst sort of business is one that grows rapidly, requires significant capital to engender the growth, and then earns little or no money.? In short he doesn't think ANY airline is a good financial bet to invest in. He does of course own NetJets though and one could argue that it is not an airline per se.
My point was smart and savvy investment gurus say that LUV stock is a good bet if you want to own airline stock. I put a lot more confidence in their opinions than those of PCL_128 who claims it's a turd. Of course he has no conflict of interest when offering that opinion.
Easy tough guy. I'm not an Air Tran guy. But I do understand your anger. You paid for your job. Air Tran guys didn't!
And your wrong, I do think you're a ********************ing *************************! You're just another chicken ******************** coward hiding behind a keyboard!