lowecur
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2003
- Posts
- 2,317
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Mike Boyd has done a masterful job analyziing WN. He paints them no longer as your friendly mom & pop store, but as a Walmart type operation looking for increased market share through the vulturistic demise of the competition.[/FONT] The flavors of the month at the present are US Airways in Charlotte and Frontier in Denver.
But he also suggests they are strongly considering the 100 seater. I suspect this will only play out in the next 12 months if Denver is a failure. However, eventually ol Herb and Gary will come around to Lowecur's way of thinking......it's just a matter of time.
:laugh:
imp:
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Market Factor: LCCs. The Easy Meat Is Gone.
A Shake-Out Is Coming
[/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Most of the financial-house analysts haven't noticed it yet, but the competitive lay of the land is now very different from what it was three years ago. [/FONT][FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]In the last year, we've seen LCCs doing some increasingly fast dancing, trying to find places for a whole lot of new airplanes coming on line. Meanwhile, restructured legacies are adjusting their fleets, their strategies, and their route systems to take advantage of emerging global and domestic market opportunities. [/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]LCCs - using a model based on "large" aircraft (100 to 160 seats) with low-ASM costs dependent on grabbing or price-generating traffic where large passenger flows are, or where they can be created - are facing a marketplace where they're increasingly going to be fighting with each other.[/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]As the prime example, it's been clear that even Southwest, arguably one of the best-managed companies in America, is now scrambling to adjust. Three years ago, the competitive battlefield was theirs to exploit. Today, they're more in a mode that is focused on dealing with market shifts, instead of being the airline that's driving them. [/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Examples are clear regarding the new environment faced by Southwest. When ATA collapsed, Southwest was vulnerable to entry of a hubbing carrier that could have been a real threat - either AirTran or America West. The result was that WN had to react, crafting a deal to capture gates at MDW. (Along with it, like an old shaggy dog, came a relationship with ATA which is something that maybe Southwest is at best ambivalent about.) [/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Then there's Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, markets that Southwest entered more out of competitive necessity than as part of a prior long-term plan. Finally, they had to enter Denver, a market Southwest had consistently decried as too expensive. Forget the jive about costs going down at Denver, the fact is that it's market imperatives that caused WN to go into the Mile High City.[/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Those imperatives are being driven by one major factor: the cost advantages of LCCs are eroding, but more importantly, their revenue streams are increasingly vulnerable to poaching by other LCCs trying to fill new airplanes coming on line.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Southwest – Grow or Stumble[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Competitively, Southwest is the most fearsome carrier in existence going into 2006. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Not because of its strengths, which are considerable, but because of its weaknesses. It has a challenge with labor costs. It has a challenge with a no-frills product that is starting to look frayed compared to other LCCs. It has increasing competitive pressure not only from restructured legacy carriers, but more dangerously from other LCCs. It's got a gaggle of new airplanes coming on line at a time when other LCCs are starting to get expansively frisky, too.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The point is that Southwest has vulnerabilities. What will make it a fearsome competitor in 2006, however, is the fact that it's fully aware of these weaknesses, and is likely going to employ very different strategies and tactics as it moves to resolve these challenges. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]That means it's going to change and adjust from its past modus operendi. Big time. Inevitably, a lot of its competitors will miss this, to their detriment.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]More ASMs Needed. Just Make Sure There's RPMs To Match. Expansion is paramount for WN. It knows that the erosion of its fuel hedges over the next three years leaves it vulnerable to other LCCs and legacies with lower labor costs. The point is that Southwest needs to grow to spread its costs over more seats. That also requires that there are people in the seats, which means that the airline can't risk opening many more alternative airports such as Manchester.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The New Southwest Effect: Nail The Competition. It also means that they can no longer rely solely on "the Southwest effect," which generates new passengers via low fares.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]See, low fares are no longer the exclusive province of Southwest - they're now the norm. That means that Southwest will need to go after other carriers' existing market share. No more Mr. Nice Guy - Southwest will need to go for its competitors' jugular.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Which is the reason (as we predicted) Southwest is targeting Charlotte. It's a lynchpin for the new US Airways revenue stream. Zap it, and it could hamstring the combined America West/US Airways program. Weaken them at CLT, and it could weaken them at other WN-competitive points, such as LAS and PHX.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Other than Charlotte, which is a competitive imperative for Southwest to take a shot at America West/US Airways, from here on in the chances are that expansion points will be ones where they'll have to take existing traffic from incumbents. Denver's an example: most markets there have already been fare-stimulated, and adding a lot more seats, whether it's by Southwest or Air Fred, won't do diddly by itself to generate substantial new traffic. More than ever before, Southwest will need to win over passengers on the basis of more than just low fares.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]And that's their weakest point. Great people, yes. Great service, yes. Competitive product amenities, no. Denver's an example. Frontier and United offer advanced seat assignment, which is no minor issue. Both offer in-flight entertainment - United on most flights, Frontier on all mainline flights. Southwest offers neither.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Upping The Product Ante To Match The Competition. Prediction: Southwest will need to implement advanced seat assignment if it is going to be successful in the long run. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The “the fall of Saigon" boarding process might be okay for DAL-LBB, but when they're trying to grab market share from the likes of United and Frontier at Denver, humorous boarding announcements are precious little comfort to Mom when little Johnny has to sit in a middle seat six rows away between what she's convinced are two Mohammed Atta look-alikes.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]More Than "One Fleet Type?" Southwest is likely re-thinking fleets. To access the real growth markets - which are the competitive strength of United, American, and other legacy carriers - it will need to look at 100-seat airliners. The challenge is that, even if it would actually make economic sense, even the mere mention of another airplane type, and the Wall Street parrots will have an out-of-body episode. They'll shriek that WN is "dead" because it is changing it's long term strategy. The stock could tank, for no other reason that a lot (not all, but a lot) of the analysts on The Street have a minus-quantity knowledge of the airline industry.
:laugh: [/FONT]
:beer:
As noted above, it's a new competitive world for Southwest, one over which it no longer has a great deal of control. How they do at Denver could be a bellwether. Competitively, they are up against two strong incumbents, and the "Southwest Effect" will be limited mostly to the results of short-term intro fares, because most large Denver markets already have low-cost airline competition. .
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Bullseye On Frontier. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Take it to the bank: Southwest is likely planning on taking Frontier out. No, not co-exist as one big happy family. This is the new Southwest, one that can not afford not to be competitively carnivorous.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The game is Frontier’s and United’s to lose, and it's a certainty that one or both of these airlines will come out competitively swinging to beat the band. Again the vulnerable points: WN lack of seat assignment, and both Frontier and United offer in-flight entertainment. The fares will be the same. It's the product that will ultimately make the difference, and that's what Southwest will likely address in the next 12 months.[/FONT]
But he also suggests they are strongly considering the 100 seater. I suspect this will only play out in the next 12 months if Denver is a failure. However, eventually ol Herb and Gary will come around to Lowecur's way of thinking......it's just a matter of time.



[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Market Factor: LCCs. The Easy Meat Is Gone.
A Shake-Out Is Coming
[/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Most of the financial-house analysts haven't noticed it yet, but the competitive lay of the land is now very different from what it was three years ago. [/FONT][FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]In the last year, we've seen LCCs doing some increasingly fast dancing, trying to find places for a whole lot of new airplanes coming on line. Meanwhile, restructured legacies are adjusting their fleets, their strategies, and their route systems to take advantage of emerging global and domestic market opportunities. [/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]LCCs - using a model based on "large" aircraft (100 to 160 seats) with low-ASM costs dependent on grabbing or price-generating traffic where large passenger flows are, or where they can be created - are facing a marketplace where they're increasingly going to be fighting with each other.[/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]As the prime example, it's been clear that even Southwest, arguably one of the best-managed companies in America, is now scrambling to adjust. Three years ago, the competitive battlefield was theirs to exploit. Today, they're more in a mode that is focused on dealing with market shifts, instead of being the airline that's driving them. [/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Examples are clear regarding the new environment faced by Southwest. When ATA collapsed, Southwest was vulnerable to entry of a hubbing carrier that could have been a real threat - either AirTran or America West. The result was that WN had to react, crafting a deal to capture gates at MDW. (Along with it, like an old shaggy dog, came a relationship with ATA which is something that maybe Southwest is at best ambivalent about.) [/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Then there's Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, markets that Southwest entered more out of competitive necessity than as part of a prior long-term plan. Finally, they had to enter Denver, a market Southwest had consistently decried as too expensive. Forget the jive about costs going down at Denver, the fact is that it's market imperatives that caused WN to go into the Mile High City.[/FONT]
[FONT=tahoma, verdana, lucida]Those imperatives are being driven by one major factor: the cost advantages of LCCs are eroding, but more importantly, their revenue streams are increasingly vulnerable to poaching by other LCCs trying to fill new airplanes coming on line.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Southwest – Grow or Stumble[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Competitively, Southwest is the most fearsome carrier in existence going into 2006. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Not because of its strengths, which are considerable, but because of its weaknesses. It has a challenge with labor costs. It has a challenge with a no-frills product that is starting to look frayed compared to other LCCs. It has increasing competitive pressure not only from restructured legacy carriers, but more dangerously from other LCCs. It's got a gaggle of new airplanes coming on line at a time when other LCCs are starting to get expansively frisky, too.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The point is that Southwest has vulnerabilities. What will make it a fearsome competitor in 2006, however, is the fact that it's fully aware of these weaknesses, and is likely going to employ very different strategies and tactics as it moves to resolve these challenges. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]That means it's going to change and adjust from its past modus operendi. Big time. Inevitably, a lot of its competitors will miss this, to their detriment.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]More ASMs Needed. Just Make Sure There's RPMs To Match. Expansion is paramount for WN. It knows that the erosion of its fuel hedges over the next three years leaves it vulnerable to other LCCs and legacies with lower labor costs. The point is that Southwest needs to grow to spread its costs over more seats. That also requires that there are people in the seats, which means that the airline can't risk opening many more alternative airports such as Manchester.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The New Southwest Effect: Nail The Competition. It also means that they can no longer rely solely on "the Southwest effect," which generates new passengers via low fares.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]See, low fares are no longer the exclusive province of Southwest - they're now the norm. That means that Southwest will need to go after other carriers' existing market share. No more Mr. Nice Guy - Southwest will need to go for its competitors' jugular.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Which is the reason (as we predicted) Southwest is targeting Charlotte. It's a lynchpin for the new US Airways revenue stream. Zap it, and it could hamstring the combined America West/US Airways program. Weaken them at CLT, and it could weaken them at other WN-competitive points, such as LAS and PHX.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Other than Charlotte, which is a competitive imperative for Southwest to take a shot at America West/US Airways, from here on in the chances are that expansion points will be ones where they'll have to take existing traffic from incumbents. Denver's an example: most markets there have already been fare-stimulated, and adding a lot more seats, whether it's by Southwest or Air Fred, won't do diddly by itself to generate substantial new traffic. More than ever before, Southwest will need to win over passengers on the basis of more than just low fares.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]And that's their weakest point. Great people, yes. Great service, yes. Competitive product amenities, no. Denver's an example. Frontier and United offer advanced seat assignment, which is no minor issue. Both offer in-flight entertainment - United on most flights, Frontier on all mainline flights. Southwest offers neither.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Upping The Product Ante To Match The Competition. Prediction: Southwest will need to implement advanced seat assignment if it is going to be successful in the long run. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The “the fall of Saigon" boarding process might be okay for DAL-LBB, but when they're trying to grab market share from the likes of United and Frontier at Denver, humorous boarding announcements are precious little comfort to Mom when little Johnny has to sit in a middle seat six rows away between what she's convinced are two Mohammed Atta look-alikes.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]More Than "One Fleet Type?" Southwest is likely re-thinking fleets. To access the real growth markets - which are the competitive strength of United, American, and other legacy carriers - it will need to look at 100-seat airliners. The challenge is that, even if it would actually make economic sense, even the mere mention of another airplane type, and the Wall Street parrots will have an out-of-body episode. They'll shriek that WN is "dead" because it is changing it's long term strategy. The stock could tank, for no other reason that a lot (not all, but a lot) of the analysts on The Street have a minus-quantity knowledge of the airline industry.

:beer:
As noted above, it's a new competitive world for Southwest, one over which it no longer has a great deal of control. How they do at Denver could be a bellwether. Competitively, they are up against two strong incumbents, and the "Southwest Effect" will be limited mostly to the results of short-term intro fares, because most large Denver markets already have low-cost airline competition. .
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Bullseye On Frontier. [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]Take it to the bank: Southwest is likely planning on taking Frontier out. No, not co-exist as one big happy family. This is the new Southwest, one that can not afford not to be competitively carnivorous.[/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, verdana, lucida]The game is Frontier’s and United’s to lose, and it's a certainty that one or both of these airlines will come out competitively swinging to beat the band. Again the vulnerable points: WN lack of seat assignment, and both Frontier and United offer in-flight entertainment. The fares will be the same. It's the product that will ultimately make the difference, and that's what Southwest will likely address in the next 12 months.[/FONT]