Barron\'s - 16.03.2020

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28 BARRON’S March 16, 2020


investment-grade balance sheet, and


that should serve it well during this


health and economic crisis.


The airline has structural advan-


tages in its favor. It dominates its ma-


jor hubs, which include Atlanta and


Salt Lake City, and that has helped it


earn the highest profit margin of leg-


acy airlines in recent years. Its credit-


card partnership withAmerican Ex-


press(AXP) is also highly profitable,


and produces recurring cash flows


that are largely uncorrelated to its


core business—though spending


would decline if the economy slows.


Delta’s dividend could also be sus-


pended, which would save it about $1


billion annually.


Delta has other options, though.


It’s reducing capacity, and using this


moment to retire older jets it had


been looking to take out of service. It


has also initiated a hiring freeze. The


company is targeting $4 billion in


cost reductions this year, plus over $3


billion in free-cash-flow savings from


deferred capital expenditures, volun-


tary pension funding, and the sus-


pension of sharebuybacks.


While Delta withdrew guidance


for 2020, the airline expects to have


at least $5 billion of liquidity by the


end of the quarter, with about $20


billion in unencumbered assets that


can be tapped later on. It has more


debt than Southwest—some $17 bil-


lion, giving it a total debt-to-Ebitda


ratio of 1.9—but it’s still manageable.


At a recent conference, CEO Ed


Bastian said that Delta is seeing as


much as a 30% decline in bookings,


and he’s prepared for worse. But he


expects the company to remain free-


cash-flow positive, and plans to


maintain its investment-grade credit


rating. “We expect demand erosion


will continue in the near term,” he


said, yet the airline has “built a plan


that prioritizes free-cash-flow genera-


tion and preserves liquidity.”


United Airlines Holdings (UAL)


Financial Flexibility Score: 20,


Third Among Large Carriers


United’s incoming CEO J. Scott


Kirby has expressed a credible worst-


case scenario, and the company is


actively taking aggressive measures


to prepare for it. That includes reduc-


ing capacity, cutting discretionary


operating expenses, slashing its 2020


planned capital expenditures in half,


and suspending its share-repurchase


program. That’s a lot of savings to go


with United’s $8 billion of available


liquidity and $20 billion in unencum-


bered assets to borrow against. It


should have enough operating cash to


remain above the $3 billion liquidity


level that the airline needs to keep


operating.


The challenge for United is that


much of its revenue and profit comes


from international routes, and


United’s debt load remains relatively


high, at 2.7 times Ebitda, with $20.5


billion in total debt. Its international


exposure has hammered the stock,


making it one of the worst perform-


ers this year, down 53%. Margin-im-


provement plans and other turn-


around initiatives will have to wait


until the pandemic recedes. Short of a


lengthy recession, United has the


balance sheet to withstand the shock.


Spirit Airlines (SAVE)


Financial Flexibility Score: 19


Ultralow-cost carrier Spirit appears


most imperiled by the crisis. The stock


is down 63% this year, and trades at


just 3.4 times earnings. However, its


debt/Ebitda is high, at 4.3 times. The


airline has always operated with a lean


cost structure, which could help it


absorb an extended period of lower


Delta is


seeing as


much as a


30% decline


in bookings,


and its CEO


expects it to


get worse.


CRISIS PLAYBOOK


Airports are ghost towns,


thanks to global travel


restrictions.


fares. Profits, of course, are part of any


company’s ability to weather storms.


“[Spirit Airlines] is one of the only


airlines to cut pricing on flights and


still be profitable,” writes J.P. Morgan


analyst Jamie Baker in a recent re-


search report. “Management’s view is


that [Spirit] will navigate the


Covid-19 situation adequately, and


that a fundamental change in land-


scape is not likely at this point.”


Baker gives management the benefit


of the doubt, rating shares the equiv-


alent of Buy with a $53 price target.


But its pitch of ultralow fares may


not resonate in a market where ev-


eryone is afraid to fly, no matter the


cost. And price-sensitive leisure trav-


elers may not return soon if the econ-


omy goes into a tailspin. We’d watch


and wait.


American Airlines Group(AAL)


Financial Flexibility Score: 12


Of the big three airlines, American


has the least flexibility. It holds $33.4


billion in debt, giving it a long-term


debt/Ebitda ratio of 4.8 times, well


above its peers’ leverage. Some of its


unsecured debt yields close to double


digits, higher than the 5% for Delta,


and the 8% for United. With a market


cap of $6 billion, its equity value is


just 17% of enterprise value, putting


it closest to the 10% level that would


signal “distress.”


That puts the greatest pressure on


maintaining cash flow. But American


also has $7.3 billion in cash and other


liquidity, and it has $10 billion in


unencumbered assets that it can bor-


row against should it need to raise


cash. American also has a buffer on


that debt load: its closest major matu-


rity of $750 million isn’t due until



  1. Its debt covenants require


American to maintain $2.5 billion in


liquidity.


Tighter profit margins and a risk-


ier balance sheet already had Ameri-


can shares trading at a discount to


other airlines, even before coronavi-


rus appeared. Though perhaps the


riskiest play of the group, it could


also have the most potential for up-


side if the coronavirus turns out to be


a shorter-term, perhaps six-month,


economic interruption.B Spencer Platt/Getty Images

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