General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
- Posts
- 20,442
I wouldn't worry too much about it, like you said it's going to get better, I'm sure of it! Unfortunately not everyone has the financial evaluation skills that you do.
Delta's financial position is getting worse not better. The growth of the company's off-balance-sheet liabilities is larger than the reduction in the company's on-balance-sheet debt.
Most of the off-balance-sheet liabilities are related to employee benefits, which have a senior claim to the company's cash flows over any debt. Here's the scoop: DAL boosted its 2011 earnings by increasing its expected return on plan assets (EROPA) assumption for its pensions to 8.93%, up from 8.82% in 2010. Page 78 in DAL's 2012 10-K filing has the details. For readers who wonder whether 8.93% is abnormally high, the answer is yes. Out of the 1,021 companies with pensions that I cover, 98% of them have a lower EROPA. Only 96 of the 1,021 raised their EROPAs in 2012 while 525 lowered and 400 made no changes. In other words, DAL's EROPA assumption is not only among the highest but it is also rising when the majority is falling. Assuming such a high EROPA lowers the amount of money that DAL has to pay into its pensions, which lowers the company's overall expenses and increases accounting earnings. One could argue that stretching the limits of EROPA and minimizing the amount of money it pays into its pensions is a fair and good strategy for a company whose pensions were adequately funded. That argument does not hold water for Delta as its pensions were under-funded by $14.1 billion
In Over Their Heads
These companies have pension liabilities that equal or exceed their market value. Below, each firm's liability as a percentage of market cap.
AK Steel 917%
Unisys 562
Resolute Forest Products 516
United States Steel 439
Exelis 228
Navistar International 196
Alcoa 179
Goddyear Tire and Rubber 174
Huntington Ingalls Industries 174
General Motors 173
RR Donnelley & Sons 171
J.C. Penney 148
Northrop Grumman 142
Lockheed Martin 133
Delta Air Lines 132
Sears Holdings 118
Raytheon 116
ALLEGHENY Technologies 105
Textron 100
Boeing 100
Market capitalization data as of July 5, 2013.
http://online.barrons.com/article/S...578573313679938382.html#articleTabs_article=1
Howie,
Thanks for all the digging. You forgot the one thing that has the most debt and pension liability, the US Government. We are all hosed eventually, and then Mars will attack.
Good try, and I'll enjoy my profit sharing checks and higher rates than yours. Huge profits each year will pay down those pension liabilities, plus higher interest rates will help eventually. You know that! Thanks for doing the research Jimmy Kramer!
Bye Bye---General Lee