Limeyflyer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2002
- Posts
- 460
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i'm insane for relaying what i heard :
at that price the stock would be trading at 25 times earnings per share. that is called a P/E multiple. 10 to 20 is a conservative or even referred to as an undervalued P?E multiple. many stocks on nasdaq and the big board will trade at 50 to 70 times earnings. they're over valued.
if the company hits its numbers( and they don't have to publish them until after they go public, then they project (I'm sure with the blesssing of investment bankers) that 25 X earnings would be realistic.
these aren't my numbers nor are they guaranteed.
there is risk with everything, try marriage and you'll understand risk alot better.
Airline PE's are typically alot higher than that. Also, look at airline stocks in the past few months. Institutions are starting to buy then again. IF Skybus goes public, exercise those options very quickly.
finsup,
for all the mudslinging, they type you from the start and left seat qual you. so what is the risk? an airbus type and left seat jet PIC within a year and chance to make a huge windfall should the options sell at the price they forecast of 68 to 78 a share.
oh the naysayers... i don't work there, but the company is being run a former southwest guy, 25 years. they have a 160 mil in wall street cash, firm orders for 65 planes and full airplanes.
fly I failed because kerry skeen was a dumbhead who made his business plan based on 30/barrel oil.
they can make money at 110.00 / barrel.
they're here to stay, and pilots that don't understand simple economics can talk smack all they want.
help me with different time, different travel habits etc.
quote]
If you spend any time in Europe you will find the vast majority of people use public transportation and are accustom to cheap no frills mass transit (different place). Ryanair took advantage of this and tapped a market that did not exist in the European airline industry. Subsequently many airlines have tried to emulate that model and have saturated the market, leaving a new entrant very little chance of success (different time).
In the USA (home of the SUV in every garage), the general public is used to service oriented travel. They expect everything for nothing. Thirty some years ago SWA built a business model that promised very little other than a friendly experience, low fare, that ran on-time and they always delivered on that promise. If a new entrant tried to emulate SWA today they probably wouldn't last a year, therefore the only successful LLCs are the hybreds offering many frills AND low fares, which establishes a loyal following.
My observation is that Skybus is offering no frills, no service, and low priced fares that can't possibly meet costs regardless of load factor.
Hey, good luck with it. I'm not wishing ill on anyone. It just doesn't make sense to me and everyone else from the sounds of it.
one misperception here is that there are only "10" $10 tickets per flight. the price goes as the day approaches. the last seat sells for $390.00 i was told.
i see how they can make money per segment. many seats sell for $165.
They are only required to sell 10 tickets for the price of $10. After those 10, they can charge whatever they want.