EMB to CRJ
Member
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2006
- Posts
- 23
There is a big difference between operating and net profit. All the stuff derived from the dot like that Consulting firms report or the Aviation Daily numbers we have been looking at recently are about operating profit.
If you look at the tables for the 4th quarter 2005 dot press release and the SkyWest press release about the 4-quarter 2005 earnings report (the link to the pdf file page 4) you will see the difference.
From the DOT Stuff
Operating Revenue , Operating Cost, Operating Profit
ASA 320, 278, 42
SKY 422, 379, 43
Totals 742 , 657, 85
Total for both
ASA and Sky 742.4, 85.3, 38.7
All the numbers line up so it looks like the net profit is about half that of the operating profit. So what that means to me it any number that comes from the dot form 41 showing total profits or total cost is not the whole story since something is taking about half the operating profit away. According to the earnings report it is mostly taxes and interest which I guess could be the cost of the airplanes leases / payments.
To ignore that difference would be like saying you can afford to have $4800 in monthly bills if your salary was $5000 a month. As we all know the take home or the net income is far less the pre tax or operating income.
So lets say ASA is making half of that 40 million a quarter net profit for Sky West Inc. 20 million a quarter, which is of course 80 million a year, net profit from ASA. I am not sure if it was Tutt or the MEC that put a 20+ million a year cost of the ALPA compensation proposal but can the company truly afford as the union has been suggesting or better yet is it good business in the best interest of the company (that is the place the sends us the pay checks not ALPA national) to give up 1/4 of the total profits for a pilot raise.
There is big difference in what is fair and what is over the top. The QOL issues that have been TA’ed are not free for the company but are not totally out of line with every one else. The changes in section 13 alone will make my life at ASA a lot better. Going on strike for a 70 seat rate to only then have the airplanes take away will not. When we cast the ballot we must think about what is best for us in the long run vs. a raise at the cost of airplanes and the victory over the man of stopping the race to the bottom.
I know the union hardliners will say I am management and that pilot costs don’t matter to an airline. That the company is going to do what they want with airplanes anyway. There must be some strange force causing airline management to want to move the airplanes to different pilot groups or airlines. Could it be the same force that caused you to get the gas that is 2.75 a gallon vs. the gas that is 2.90 a gallon since your car run just as well on either one? It is only .15 cents a gallon but over the course of a year it sure adds up.
If you were to only look at the hourly wage and not the total benefit package what is a 80 hour average month * 55 dollars average hourly rate * 1800 pilots * 12 months a year?
$95,040,000.00 but that number getting bigger or smaller by 10% or 15% has no affect on the airline it is just chump change.
If you don't believe me see the sources of the data at a computer near you.
http://www.skywest.com/invest/investor_releases/2006/Feb/SKYW_Earnings4Q05.pdf
http://www.bts.gov/press_releases/2006/bts024_06/html/bts024_06.html
http://www.transtats.bts.gov/databases.asp?Mode_ID=1&Mode_Desc=Aviation&Subject_ID2=0
If you look at the tables for the 4th quarter 2005 dot press release and the SkyWest press release about the 4-quarter 2005 earnings report (the link to the pdf file page 4) you will see the difference.
From the DOT Stuff
Operating Revenue , Operating Cost, Operating Profit
ASA 320, 278, 42
SKY 422, 379, 43
Totals 742 , 657, 85
From the SkyWest press release
Operating Revenue, Operating income, NET Income or profit
ASA and Sky 742.4, 85.3, 38.7
All the numbers line up so it looks like the net profit is about half that of the operating profit. So what that means to me it any number that comes from the dot form 41 showing total profits or total cost is not the whole story since something is taking about half the operating profit away. According to the earnings report it is mostly taxes and interest which I guess could be the cost of the airplanes leases / payments.
To ignore that difference would be like saying you can afford to have $4800 in monthly bills if your salary was $5000 a month. As we all know the take home or the net income is far less the pre tax or operating income.
So lets say ASA is making half of that 40 million a quarter net profit for Sky West Inc. 20 million a quarter, which is of course 80 million a year, net profit from ASA. I am not sure if it was Tutt or the MEC that put a 20+ million a year cost of the ALPA compensation proposal but can the company truly afford as the union has been suggesting or better yet is it good business in the best interest of the company (that is the place the sends us the pay checks not ALPA national) to give up 1/4 of the total profits for a pilot raise.
There is big difference in what is fair and what is over the top. The QOL issues that have been TA’ed are not free for the company but are not totally out of line with every one else. The changes in section 13 alone will make my life at ASA a lot better. Going on strike for a 70 seat rate to only then have the airplanes take away will not. When we cast the ballot we must think about what is best for us in the long run vs. a raise at the cost of airplanes and the victory over the man of stopping the race to the bottom.
I know the union hardliners will say I am management and that pilot costs don’t matter to an airline. That the company is going to do what they want with airplanes anyway. There must be some strange force causing airline management to want to move the airplanes to different pilot groups or airlines. Could it be the same force that caused you to get the gas that is 2.75 a gallon vs. the gas that is 2.90 a gallon since your car run just as well on either one? It is only .15 cents a gallon but over the course of a year it sure adds up.
If you were to only look at the hourly wage and not the total benefit package what is a 80 hour average month * 55 dollars average hourly rate * 1800 pilots * 12 months a year?
$95,040,000.00 but that number getting bigger or smaller by 10% or 15% has no affect on the airline it is just chump change.
If you don't believe me see the sources of the data at a computer near you.
http://www.skywest.com/invest/investor_releases/2006/Feb/SKYW_Earnings4Q05.pdf
http://www.bts.gov/press_releases/2006/bts024_06/html/bts024_06.html
http://www.transtats.bts.gov/databases.asp?Mode_ID=1&Mode_Desc=Aviation&Subject_ID2=0