General Lee
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- Aug 24, 2002
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Portions of the announcement:
DELTA ANNOUNCES PLAN TO RETURN MORE THAN $1 BILLION TO SHAREHOLDERS OVER NEXT THREE YEARS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS INITIATES $0.06 PER SHARE QUARTERLY DIVIDEND, AUTHORIZES $500 MILLION SHARE REPURCHASE
BALANCED CAPITAL DEPLOYMENT CREATES UP TO $5 BILLION OF VALUE FOR SHAREHOLDERS THROUGH FURTHER DEBT REDUCTION, RETURN OF CASH TO SHAREHOLDERS, AND MANAGEMENT OF PENSION LIABILITY
May 8, 2013
ATLANTA, May 8, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- In a broad financial plan released today, Delta Air Lines (NYSE
AL) announced a balanced capital deployment program aimed at creating up to $5 billion of value for shareholders, including returning more than $1 billion to shareholders over the next three years.
In an investor presentation this morning, Delta outlined a comprehensive, five-year financial plan. The plan focuses on free cash flow generation through a combination of expected earnings improvements and a disciplined approach to capital investment. Over the next five years, the company plans to reinvest $2.0 - $2.5 billion annually, or approximately 50 percent of its operating cash flow, into improving the company's fleet, facilities, products and technology. The resulting free cash flow will be used to return cash to shareholders, further reduce the company's debt, and opportunistically address longer-term pension funding needs, driving up to $5 billion of value to Delta's shareholders.
As part of this plan, Delta expects to achieve and maintain an adjusted net debt level of $7 billion, a $5 billion reduction over 2012. By meeting the $7 billion target, Delta will have reduced its adjusted net debt by $10 billion since 2009, significantly decreasing the company's balance sheet risk and generating more than 50 percent savings in interest expense.
The company also plans to make up to $1 billion of incremental contributions to the company's defined benefit pension plans over the next five years. These contributions would be in addition to the $650 - $700 million annual required minimum contribution.
Red,
Did you read the last paragraph? Seems like they do want to tackle the defined benefit pension under funding. And they planned originally to decrease the net debt to $10 billion by the end of this year, but now want to decrease it to $7 billion.... Impressive, eh Red? I know SWA has had dividends forever, but this is an impressive re-start for a legacy.
Bye Bye---General Lee
DELTA ANNOUNCES PLAN TO RETURN MORE THAN $1 BILLION TO SHAREHOLDERS OVER NEXT THREE YEARS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS INITIATES $0.06 PER SHARE QUARTERLY DIVIDEND, AUTHORIZES $500 MILLION SHARE REPURCHASE
BALANCED CAPITAL DEPLOYMENT CREATES UP TO $5 BILLION OF VALUE FOR SHAREHOLDERS THROUGH FURTHER DEBT REDUCTION, RETURN OF CASH TO SHAREHOLDERS, AND MANAGEMENT OF PENSION LIABILITY
May 8, 2013
ATLANTA, May 8, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- In a broad financial plan released today, Delta Air Lines (NYSE
In an investor presentation this morning, Delta outlined a comprehensive, five-year financial plan. The plan focuses on free cash flow generation through a combination of expected earnings improvements and a disciplined approach to capital investment. Over the next five years, the company plans to reinvest $2.0 - $2.5 billion annually, or approximately 50 percent of its operating cash flow, into improving the company's fleet, facilities, products and technology. The resulting free cash flow will be used to return cash to shareholders, further reduce the company's debt, and opportunistically address longer-term pension funding needs, driving up to $5 billion of value to Delta's shareholders.
As part of this plan, Delta expects to achieve and maintain an adjusted net debt level of $7 billion, a $5 billion reduction over 2012. By meeting the $7 billion target, Delta will have reduced its adjusted net debt by $10 billion since 2009, significantly decreasing the company's balance sheet risk and generating more than 50 percent savings in interest expense.
The company also plans to make up to $1 billion of incremental contributions to the company's defined benefit pension plans over the next five years. These contributions would be in addition to the $650 - $700 million annual required minimum contribution.
Red,
Did you read the last paragraph? Seems like they do want to tackle the defined benefit pension under funding. And they planned originally to decrease the net debt to $10 billion by the end of this year, but now want to decrease it to $7 billion.... Impressive, eh Red? I know SWA has had dividends forever, but this is an impressive re-start for a legacy.
Bye Bye---General Lee