Barron\'s - 16.03.2020

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26 BARRON’S March 16, 2020


A


re airline stocks investible?


On a price/earnings basis


they appear cheap—Delta


trades at 5.6 times earn-


ings, while United and


American go for less than


four times earnings. But


airlines have been cheap for the en-


tire bull market, so those numbers


really don’t matter. “With the positive


airline story uncertain or even bro-


ken, there likely is no supportive val-


uation metric for investors,” says


Helane Becker, a veteran industry


analyst with Cowen. She recom-


mends staying on the sidelines until


there’s evidence that the virus threat


is receding.


So what should investors look at


instead? We looked to the bond mar-


ket for a possible answer. While air-


line bonds have sold off, as of Friday


afternoon, none of their unsecured


debt was trading at levels that signal


severe trouble ahead. “The debt mar-


ket is calling them stressed,” says


Barry Kupferberg, managing partner


at Barkers Point Capital Advisors.


“Not distressed.”


Barron’sperformed a stress test on


the airlines, looking at unencumbered


assets (any property like planes or


real estate that the airline owns out-


right), credit facilities, available cash,


and profitability. Scores range from


below five to 30. You would need an


iron constitution to take a flier now,


but the results lead to a couple of


stocks to consider—especially South-


west and Delta—and a few that could


keep investors up at night if the coro-


navirus, and economic, situation


takes a turn for the worse.


Southwest Airlines (LUV)


Financial Flexibility Score: 30,


Highest


Southwest’s stock has dropped 24%


this year, less than any other U.S. car-


rier. There’s a reason for that—its in-


dustry-leading balance sheet. The


low-cost airline has $5.3 billion in cash


and short-term investments available,


plus a credit line of $1 billion. Its long-


term debt/Ebitda (earnings before


interest, taxes, depreciation, and


amortization) ratio sits at a comfort-


able 0.7 times. Bernstein analyst Da-


vid Vernon estimates that Southwest


has $23.3 billion in untapped liquidity


at its disposal, enough to last quite a


while. Southwest has the least amount


of debt, just $4 billion compared with


$17 billion at Delta.


Still, expect it to take a revenue hit.


On March 5, Southwest estimated a


$200 million to $300 million drop in


sales from the virus, and has provided


no update since. The total impact is


probably worse. Earnings growth,


already challenged, will also take a


shot. The good news: Southwest has


the industry’s longest record of annual


profitability—it was profitable even


after 9/11—and it’s a good bet that the


carrier will make it through this crisis.


Southwest certainly thinks so.


“While it is difficult to estimate the


duration and severity of the impact


from Covid-19,” Southwest said in a


March 5 filing, “the company remains


financially strong.”


Delta Air Lines (DAL)


Financial Flexibility Score: 28,


Second Highest


Delta is another airline to have an


CRISIS PLAYBOOK


AirlinesNotYetaBuy.


Here’sWhattoWatch.


Air-carrier stocks have been cheap throughout the bull market. Global travel restrictions


due to the coronavirus have made them cheaper. Here are some key metrics to track.


Spencer Platt/Getty Images

“The debt


market is


calling


[airline


bonds]


stressed,


not


distressed.”


Barry Kupferberg,
managing partner
at Barkers Point
Capital Advisors

By NICHOLAS JASINSKI


and AL ROOT


Asia are down 100% from the time


before the virus started spreading.


United is planning for a “dire sce-


nario” in which revenue collapses by


70% in April and May, and then ta-


pers off to a 20% decline inNovem-


ber and December.


“I suspect that’s shocking to some


of you, and for what it’s worth, we


don’t think it will actually be that


bad,” said J. Scott Kirby, United’s


president and incoming CEO, at a


conference this past week (held re-


motely because of the virus). “But


United is going to plan for a severe


scenario and make sure that we can


weather even that storm.”


Beyond slashing flights and


routes, airlines can pull more levers


to cut costs. They could pare their


fleets to reduce maintenance and


operating expenses. Labor costs can


be cut by firing or furloughing em-


ployees, cutting back on training, or


offering buyout packages. (The CEOs


of United and Southwest are taking


salary cuts, and the CEO of Delta is


forgoing his salary for six months.) If


all that isn’t enough, airlines can shed


assets, including international gates,


slots, and company-owned aircraft,


and they could default on lease pay-


ments for planes. Indeed, they now


have far more unencumbered assets


than they did before the industry


consolidated, giving them more flexi-


bility to add leverage, Vernon says.


The Outlook


So what’s the industry outlook?


Under Vernon’s worst-case scenario,


air travel starts to recover after four


to five months. That would wipe out


2020 earnings before interest and


taxes (Ebit) for the big three U.S.


carriers: American, Delta, and


United. If the collapse lasts for six


months, all of 2020 Ebitda (includ-


ing depreciation and amortization)


would be gone.


Yet Vernon and other analysts


aren’t modeling bankruptcy scenar-


ios just yet. Airlines would have to


burn through cash on their balance


sheets, tap revolving cash resources,


leverage assets, and deplete un-


tapped liquidity in the credit markets


before their equity would be im-


paired in an insolvency scenario,


Vernon says. He estimates that the


major U.S. carriers have nearly $100


billion of untapped liquidity—


enough to get them through several


months of bare-bones operations.


“They’ll exhaust short-term mea-


sures and then look at new sources


of leverage and borrowing,” he says,


“but we’re a long way from that.”


Helane Becker, a veteran industry


analyst with Cowen, doesn’t view a


widespread bankruptcy as immi-


nent, yet. But she is sounding more


alarmed. “The airlines are in cash


preservation mode, and we fully ex-


pect to see credit facilities extended


and increased in the next week,” she


wrote in a report on Thursday. “We


previously stated U.S. airline bank-


ruptcies were unlikely and in the


near-term that still remains the case,


BUT if bookings do not improve in


the next three months things could


deteriorate quickly.”


Airlines are talking to their banks


about raising capital, she adds, with


United raising $2 billion this past


week, Delta tapping $1 billion the


week prior, and American receiving


$500 million the week before that.


“It’s probably not going to be enough


in the short term,” Becker writes.


“What is absolutely clear to us is that


there is zero predictability to the fear


that exists and the actions being


taken, making it nearly impossible to


get ahead of.”


Analysts can be forgiven for flying


blind. No disease outbreak in the


modern era caused countries the size


of China or Italy to quarantine vast


populations or triggered a wide-


spread collapse in supply chains,


trade, business, and social activity.


The last three outbreaks—SARS in


2003, avian flu in 2005, and MERS


in 2015—subsided after three


months, followed by a six- to eight-


month recovery in air traffic, accord-


ing to Linenberg. Air travel plunged


40% in the two months after the 9/11


attacksbut gradually recovered.


While the industry suffered during


the financial crisis, carriers managed


to stay aloft and avoid the govern-


ment bailouts that kept banks and


auto makers afloat.


Bob Harrell, an aviation consul-


tant who analyzes fares, calculates


that airlines have seen an 11% to 15%


drop in revenue per mile compared


to a year ago. “On a large base, that’s


a very dramatic cut,” he says. “The


airlines are much healthier than they


were in the last economic downturn


and after 9/11, but this is going to be


a serious test.”


Let’s hope the airlines pass with


flying colors.B

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