Part II
Corporate accounts also are shifting to the fractional market, often to supplement corporate fleets or to serve as the equivalent of their flight departments. NetJets' clients include General Electric Co., Sun Microsystems Inc. and Prudential Insurance Co. When he was CEO of Texaco, Jim Kinnear had the oil company purchase a NetJets share in a small jet to augment the company's corporate fleet of larger planes and reduce the number of trips in which the plane is flown empty to get into position to meet a customer or return to base. "We really saved money," he says.
When he retired in 1993, Mr. Kinnear bought a personal NetJets share primarily for trips between his Connecticut home and his farm near Danville, Va. "There is no commercial air service to Danville," he explains. "And I travel with a shotgun and three bird dogs."
Fully 80% of NetJets customers have never owned a business aircraft before. The concept "attracts a layer of customer that had need for a jet on an occasional basis but couldn't afford whole-plane ownership," says Howard Rubel, aerospace analyst for Goldman Sachs & Co. "The size of the business has surprised me."
Some customers are signing on because they found owning a private plane was simply a burden. Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger had his own Gulfstream for several years and didn't like the headaches. "You have the pilots at your throat about vacation, that their wife is pregnant, why they can't have New Year's Eve off," he says. "It's on and on and on." Now, with fractions in several NetJets planes, Mr. Schwarzenegger says he lets the company worry about managing the crews and all other details. "I had to get over the ego thing: It's [not] my plane," he says. "I like this package better."
Finding the Formula
NetJets' story began in 1984 when Mr. Santulli, now 57, bought an ailing charter company in Columbus, Executive Jet, as a platform for doing aircraft leasing deals. A mathematician and former investment banker, Mr. Santulli started mulling buying a plane but figured he wouldn't use it enough to justify the expense. He asked three friends to go in with him and they immediately argued about who would get the plane when.
So he came up with algorithms that essentially figured out how many backup planes would be needed to provide round-the-clock availability to a group of fractional owners. In his first year, he sold three fractions. By 1992, he had sold 18 plane's worth of slices to about 90 owners, and the business nearly sank during that recession.
Even now, fractional-ownership carriers, like their larger rivals, throw off stingy profits, if any at all. "It's not a high-margin business," says Mr. Santulli. "It's a business that requires tremendous capital ... and staying power." Indeed, it took nine years for Executive Jet to become profitable after it shifted its focus to fractions from managing jets on behalf of other companies. Today, Executive Jet is still in the business of managing corporate fleets and is a major charter-flight broker. Despite $2 billion in revenue, the company slipped into the red again last year because of costs associated with its fledging European operation.
Strong demand has attracted a host of start-ups, too, each offering specials to attract customers. "The pricing model today is not good," says Mr. Santulli. Fierce competition exists between NetJets and Flight Options, a Cleveland-based specialist in fractional ownership of used aircraft. Last month it became the No. 2 player by acquiring Raytheon Co.'s loss-laden Travel Air new-plane fractional service. Flight Options, which now has 200 new and used planes, hopes to surpass NetJets as the top dog in three or four years, says Kenn Ricci, the CEO.
Various other players have sprung up with similar ambitions, including Flexjet, owned by plane builder Bombardier Inc., and CitationShares, which is partly owned by Textron. Still others sell not ownership but memberships, in which a passenger puts down, say, $100,000, then receives that amount worth of on-demand charter trips. A market leader in that field is eBizJets Aviation LLC.
Indeed, so crowded and tough is the fledgling market that the largest commercial airline companies -- United parent UAL Corp. and American parent AMR Corp. -- both got out. In launching a fractional subsidiary a year ago, UAL said it wanted to win, or win back, the customers that it had lost to the likes of NetJets. AMR had similar reasons for taking a stake in Flexjet. But both ejected, saying they wanted to concentrate on their core businesses.
Mr. Buffett is the unlikely owner and unabashed pitchman of NetJets through his Berkshire Hathaway investment vehicle. Stung a few years ago by losses on a big stake in US Airways Group Inc., Mr. Buffett took a public stand against investing in the industry. "I swore off airlines," he concedes.
But Mr. Buffett is famous for investing in products that he himself likes and uses. That's what happened after his wife became a NetJets customer in 1995, and then his aunt after that. He noticed that flying NetJets was easier and less expensive than owning a plane. The Omaha investment guru was impressed by the program's growth rate, customer service and impeccable safety record. When he learned that Mr. Santulli was thinking about selling in 1998, Berkshire quickly bought Executive Jet for $725 million. Mr. Buffett sold Berkshire's corporate jet soon after and now gets where he is going on NetJet fractions.
It isn't the simplest business he ever purchased, and its profit margin will never equal that of See's Candies or the Buffalo News, two other Berkshire companies. The competitive battle currently raging in the market likely means that Executive Jet will at best produce modest profits for the next few years, he reckons. But long-term he is bullish. "I think it will be a very big business," Mr. Buffett says. "It will be big, and we will be No. 1."
Tough Management Job
It is a hard business to manage, one that makes full use of the mathematical skills of Mr. Santulli. What are the probabilities that all 300 Gulfstream shareholders will want the 58 planes at the same time? How many backup planes must be owned to cover that eventuality? In addition to the planes owned by its shareholders, NetJet owns an additional 50 planes just for backup purposes, a huge fixed cost.
When it simply can't meet a shareholder's request for a plane, NetJet turns to a roster of charter providers and eats most of the cost. Other challenges include scheduling the flights to minimize the times planes fly empty and matching the pilots, who each fly only one model type, with demand within the limits of their duty times. "It's a game we play," says Al Peters, vice president of scheduling at NetJets. "I've either got more aircraft than crew one day or vice versa."
In this three-dimensional chess game, Mr. Peters also must think about spreading out the planes in each fleet type so they're not all bunched up on the East Coast. Because Mr. Peters moves planes around like pawns, his pilots always check in when they wake up in the morning. Often their planes have vanished overnight to fly other missions. Either another plane will be flown in, or the pilots will be sent -- often on commercial airlines -- to catch a plane in a different city.
At the moment, NetJets' labor costs are well below those of the airline industry. Pilots, whom NetJets recruits from the military, corporate fleets and the growing ranks of laid-off commercial pilots, tend to like this job because it gives them new jets to fly and more freedom and variety in their work schedule. But unhappiness is building about pay, which tops out at $100,000 a year -- below the industry standard even for the business-aircraft industry. The majority of NetJets' 1,600 U.S. pilots, who are represented by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters union, are bucking for a substantial raise in current contract talks.
The big question is how much growth exists beyond this market's current customer base of corporate buyers and individuals who have the earning power to pay the hefty fees that go with these five-year contracts. "The market isn't going to keep going up and up," says Richard Aboulafia, an aviation consultant with the Teal Group. "It's always going to be a niche."
That's how Vinod Gupta uses it. Mr. Gupta, chief executive of infoUSA Inc., an Omaha, Neb., provider of proprietary data bases, has his pick of four NetJet models and a total of 400 flight hours a year. "But if there's a nonstop flight," he says, "I'll always take commercial. I fly Southwest all the time, Omaha to Las Vegas." The fractional jets, which are used by infoUSA's 15 top executives, literally buy the company time, he says. Of course, Mr. Gupta adds, "you have to have money to pay for this time-savings."