Greg Anderson
Analyst · Brandon Oglenski from Barclays. Your question please
Drew, thank you and good afternoon everyone. 2021 was another challenging year and it has been amazing and humble to see team Allegiant continually rise to the occasion in this unpredictable environment. During 2021, we inducted 13 aircraft into our fleet, we added more than 700 team members, we flew 8% more ASMs than we did in 2019. Additionally, our passenger and revenue accounts for the past two quarters exceeded the same periods in 2019. We had three consecutive profitable quarters including the fourth and a full year adjusted operating margin of 6.6% and adjusted net income of $35 million. These are industry leading results in 2021 and in recognition of these extraordinary efforts, it is with great with great pleasure to mention our Board approved a special variable compensation payout to all of our team members based on GAAP results. Our sincerest thanks to all of you. For the fourth quarter, we reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.18, our third consecutive quarter of positive adjusted net income. Demand and revenue are strong. Even in the face of Omicron and disruptive weather, our 4Q 2021 revenue was up 8% year over two year on increased capacity of 13%. On the cost front, we still have some work to do. Adjusted operating costs excluding fuel outpace growth and we're up 21% year over two year. On a unitized basis, our adjusted CASM-X was $0.0724 or up 7% year over two year. Excluding the effects of our IROP costs specific to customer compensation during the fourth quarter, our adjusted CASM-X would have been $.0673 or flat year over two years. As described last quarter, the largest component of our IROP cost is the compensation program for inconvenience passengers. This is compensation we provide in excess of the ticket amount. We are not aware of any program in the industry near as generous and importantly, our customers impacted by summer IROPs have returned to book at the same rate to those who were not impacted. This customer compensation program drove an incremental $23 million in payments to our impacted customers during the fourth quarter. Turning towards 2022, Omicron continue to rip into January and drove further irregular operations. As Maury noted we extract this volatility to largely be behind us. We expect IROP customer compensation cost to provide roughly $0.30 headwind to our first quarter CASM. Based on our first quarter 2022 capacity guide, we estimate our first quarter CASM-X at a midpoint of $0.0685, up 3% when compared to 1Q 2019. In addition to the elevated IROPs, the primary headwinds around unitized cost year over three are largely driven by inflationary pressures with stations wages and fuel. These headwinds are in part combatted by efficiencies gained and labor productivity as we expect our FTE per aircraft in 2022 to be closer to 42 or 43, which compares favorably to our 2019 average of 48. This decrease primarily relates to management and corporate area scaling with our growth. In addition, our average seat per departure is up by five seats to 3% year over three. ASMs per gallon in the first quarter are also expected to increase by 5% compared to the same period in 2019. fuel prices however, continue to rise and we are currently seeing Brent hovering around $90 per barrel. Elevated fuel coupled with labor constraints, inflationary pressures, and Omicron are some of the current challenges at hand. Given these uncertainties, we are pleased with our measured baseline growth plan for 2022. Today, we expect a comfortable full year 2022 departure growth in the low double-digits compared to 2021. However year-over-year ASM growth should naturally outpace departure growth by roughly five percentage points given the increasing average seats -- stage length for departure. We expect our earnings potential to improve throughout 2022 as the environment becomes more normalized. Our unique model should allow us to layer on more capacity at the appropriate times to drive higher profitability while maintaining the flexibility to not fly if the environment or returns do not justify. This flexibility is further supported by our strong balance sheet. Over the past few years, we have more than doubled our cash balance as well, while nearly cutting our net debt in half. We did not have the enhanced burden of leveraging up with the expensive debt during the pandemic as most other carriers did. And the strength of our balance sheet coupled with our broad network support well our new aircraft order with Boeing for the 50 MAX 737 family-powered by CFM. The operating efficiencies of the MAX aircraft should drive even higher returns on our most productive lines of flying. We are excited to incorporate these aircraft in our fleet. As we do so, we expect a nominal headwind towards unit cost during 2022 due to training and staffing. In early January, we made our first pre delivery deposit for this order and the first delivery is expected in June of 2023. Our full year 2022 aircraft cash CapEx of $260 million includes pre-delivery deposits for this year. For full year 2022, we expect roughly $90 million heavy maintenance CapEx. This is 30% less than our pre-pandemic expectations for 2022. And given our MAX order coupled with the resulting deeper partnership with CFM in supporting our existing CEO engines -- or CO engine, we have increased our ability to more efficiently manage our heavy maintenance program for years to come. Our fleet plan has an ending 2022 with 127 a 320 aircraft, of which 70 are configured at 180.60. Of the 19 incremental aircraft year-over-year, we have already taken delivery of nine. As a reminder, 15 of these aircraft were acquired through finance or operating lease. We expect to exit 2022 with average seats per departure of 177 seats and average ASMs per gallon of 87. As we incorporate the 737 MAX aircraft over the next three years, our ASMs per gallon should increase by more than 10% versus the 2022 exit rate. And we estimate a percentage point increase in ASMs per gallon is worth roughly $7 million in fuel savings when compared to 2019 fuel efficiency levels. In closing, as noted earlier, 2021 was another chaotic year. Throughout this chaos, we felt there were unique points in time to make several moves to enhance long-term value for our stakeholders. These moves include but are not limited to aircraft order with Boeing; partnership with Viva Aerobus, secured financing to complete our Sunseeker project, and increased investments in systems, tools, and infrastructure to better support our long-term growth plans. With many of these major strategic items set, we will continue to focus on getting and staying ahead on the execution front. Team Allegiant has seen and experienced a lot together over many years and I believe our results stand for themselves. With that, I turn it over to questions.