Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

AirTran tacks on add'l $140M to cash

  • Thread starter Thread starter lowecur
  • Start date Start date
  • Watchers Watchers 30

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web
One thing for certain, i don't think anyone here on this board understands the economy better than Andy. I've read his postings for sometime, he usually nails his predictions. Go back and check it out for yourself.
 
One thing for certain, i don't think anyone here on this board understands the economy better than Andy. I've read his postings for sometime, he usually nails his predictions. Go back and check it out for yourself.

Heyas,

Agreed. Andy's musings are in line with my own predictions from another thread.

Adding to what Andy as already said, gold production has been oversold, but this fact hasn't made it into the mainstream. When it becomes apparent that it isn't going to be the readily available "haven" it has in the past, the price is going to go into orbit.

When it becomes known that gold is in short supply, this will cause another panic, and will probably be the spark that ignites the collapse of the dollar. Hyperinflation ensues.

The fiscal policy of the current (and past) administrations has put us on course for a dreadful economic collapse that will last a decade, if not longer.

Nu
 
Cargo traditionally pays a LOT more than that for the same space...
Traditionally may be the key word. We had the Fedex MEC chair at the ALPA Q & A session a few weeks ago, and he wasn't painting a real rosy picture. He talked about how the demand for their premium next-day product was falling off a cliff in the current economic environment.

From the way he was talking, it looks like the days of saying Fedex/UPS are recession/furlough proof are probably going to be over by the end of 2009.
 
BTW... Analysts are predicting a $74 million profit for AAI in 2009...
Current projections (as of 1/21/09) are now $0.99/share which correlates to about a $117 million profit for 2009 (118 million outstanding shares). That projection has been upgraded about 5-10 cents per share every couple weeks as Jet A prices remain below $1.50/gallon with no rebound in sight.
 
MGMT is forecasting to end the year with about 150 million shares outstanding due to warrrants and convertible bonds being called for stock. FWIW
 
MGMT is forecasting to end the year with about 150 million shares outstanding due to warrrants and convertible bonds being called for stock. FWIW

Will that dilute the stock and pressure the price down?
 
JetFumes, with all due respect, you have been brainwashed by realtors. And completely wrong.
Thanks to my investment strategy over the last year (yes, I put my money where my mouth is), I am DEEP in the 35% marginal tax bracket. In spite of that, home ownership would be an extremely poor decision for me.
Before a dime of your Schedule A 'counts', you need to remember that a standard deduction for married joint is $10,900. The realtors rarely mention that small 'detail' in their calculations.
I specifically wrote about the current environment (likely to persist through 2014). One needs to understand that for the average person, buying a home is a highly levered investment. It's an investment because you almost always have the choice to rent vice buy. If you put 20% down, you're levered 5:1. But most put down no more than 5%; levering themselves to 20:1 or greater. That's a play that makes a huge ROI when real estate prices increase, but will crush you when real estate prices decline. Take a look at the Case-Shiller Housing Index. November's numbers showed an annual average decrease in housing prices of 19.1%. Dallas fared best at a 3.3% annual decrease in home values. http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/01/27/a-look-at-case-shiller-numbers-by-metro-area-5/ However, the month over month decrease was 2.2%, showing an acceleration on the downside.
In the past, I've seen where realtors have factored in home appreciation in order to justify buying a home. I suspect that they leave out home depreciation when working the numbers in the current evnironment. Considering that anyone buying a home today will likely owe more than that home's worth by the time that home prices bottom, it is foolish to buy a home today.

I guess you have to ask yourself the question of whether your going to live in a certain area for a good amount of time or not. In the short term, prices may still go down, but I paid 200,000.00 less for a home in my area than I would have a year and a half ago. I was renting before that. My wife an I earn a good amount, and we plan on living here indefinitely, so after crunching the numbers it made sense. You need a place to live, so it makes sense to own if the PRICE is right. Our home is our home, not an investment. I'm not the sharpest guy around, but what is a good investment right now?
 

Latest resources

Back
Top Bottom