Shane Tackett
Analyst · Evercore ISI. Please go ahead
Thanks, Ben, and good morning, everyone. My comments will cover similar areas as the past couple of calls with a focus on liquidity and net debt, costs and cash burden during the quarter and expectations going into 2021. I’ll also briefly discuss our recent order and fleet plans. We ended the year with $1.7 billion in adjusted net debt, which was essentially flat from year end 2019. We believe we’ll be the only airline to achieve flat net debt without having issued equity. With no impairment to our balance sheet we are well positioned to capitalize on the recovery. We were able to achieve this result even in light of a $5.2 billion revenue decline from last year. And that is because we were running a strong business before the pandemic, and because of the speed with which we reduced cash spend throughout 2020. We removed $2.4 billion in expenses in 2020 shrunk capital spending and moved to secure structural cost savings going forward. Those actions coupled with $750 million in direct grant aid from Congress to maintain industry jobs, we’re able to fully offset our revenue loss to maintain flat net debt. Regarding liquidity, during 2020, we’ve created access to over $5 billion in incremental liquidity. And today we have $3.5 billion of cash on hand inclusive of approximately $266 million that we received last week under the second round of PSP. We also have the additional $1.8 billion in available incremental financing through the CARES loan program, which we now have until May 28 to determine how much, if any, we will borrow. Our adjusted debt to cap is about 61% right now with low CapEx plan in 2021, we will be in a position to begin to reduce leverage by lowering our cash balance and repaying debt this year, assuming there is a stabilized recovery from here forward. In fact, if we were able to return to normal cash on hand levels and use the current excess cash towards debt repayment, our debt to cap would be below 50%, which as you know is within our long-term target range. Turning to costs, adjusted operating expenses were down 27% in the fourth quarter, two points better than Q3 while capacity in Q4 was up 13 points. This performance was aided by 3,300 employees remaining on leaves or incentive lines reduced costs driven by now 40 permanently parked Airbus aircraft and several favorable resolutions of vendor negotiations resulting in one time savings. Additionally, we saw the ramping of several of the structural cost initiatives that we detailed for you on the last call toward run rate levels, including permanent wage reductions, non-wage overhead spend reductions and supplier rate reductions. Variable costs for the quarter were up with the added capacity and our COVID business recovery program, a goals based bonus program that was designed to align our employees in managing this crisis, paid out as a target, as a result of our employees’ fantastic work around safety and our industry leading cash burn reduction efforts. This drove incremental cost in the fourth quarter. So the program was an effective way to align our employees ran important tools this past year. Our GAAP operating expenses include several one-time charges that I’d like to touch on briefly. Including approximately $255 million of impairment charges associated with the write-off of lease assets and recognition of lease return cost estimates for aircraft that we have permanently parked. We also recognize a credit of $102 million for the revision of our estimated pilot incentive leaves. As you know, we designed our leave programs early in the third quarter, but since then we have finalized a significant fleet decision that allowed us to refine our schedule, which now reflects a higher mix of Boeing flying. Cross training and returned to work schedules were impacted by these changes. We had designed the program to have flexibility for just this reason. While we’ve done well this year, managing spend and making our cost structure more variable, we have more work to do to return Alaska to pre-COVID unit costs. For 30 years now, our formula has been to have low fares enabled by low costs, which are best driven by a high productivity and low overhead mindset. Achieving those isn’t easy. It takes leadership focus, excellent execution of our operation, and buy-in from our people. In the post-pandemic period, we believe these same principles will ultimately be required to drive our business recovery. Our average cash outflows as defined under the cash burn metric were approximately $450 million per month in Q4, which is in line with the expectation we shared with you on our last call. Our cash burn in the fourth quarter of approximately $3.8 million per day was a sequential improvement from the third quarter driven primarily by improvements in demand, despite the choppiness that developed in November and December. Beginning today, we are sunsetting monthly cash burn guidance that we introduced in the initial phase of this crisis. Instead, we will provide quarterly operating cash flow expectations, which are more direct measure of the health of our business as we believe the acute liquidity risks that mattered in 2020 have been mitigated by our available liquidity. With that, I will turn to 2021 cash and cost guidance. As Ben detailed, we anticipate operating capacity of approximately 70% of 2019 levels in Q1 and 80% by summer. This will naturally bring incremental flying costs back into the business. Last quarter, I detailed for you approximately $215 million in cost initiatives that had already been identified are secured. We have since identified an additional $50 million of savings, including $10 million in fleet related savings as we begin replacing the Airbus with MAX aircraft, $10 million in real estate related reductions and $30 million in productivity related initiatives. Some initiatives are now at the run rate levels, while others will ramp through 2021. Our current expectation is for Q1 CASM ex to be up approximately 20%. And we expect continued sequential improvement throughout the year on our way back to pre-COVID levels even if we are a smaller company. We expect our operating cash flow for the first quarter inclusive of PSP funds to be flat to minus $100 million. However, I believe cash flows from operations will be positive during the first half of the year. If the vaccine rollout works, as we all expect it will and allows demand to snap up. Given what I’ve shared about our liquidity and these cash flow expectations, we currently have no plan to draw any incremental financing in the first quarter. Having said that our default will be to maintain conservatism until we have more confidence that the recovery is stable. So we may extend or renew some existing debt that is currently slated for repayment in March and April. Before I turn the call over for questions, of course would like to touch on the very exciting news that came out just before Christmas regarding the future of our fleet. The order we jointly announced with Boeing provides a clear path to transition into a higher gauge, more efficient aircraft as we return our leased Airbus fleet. The partnership between Alaska and Boeing is as strong as ever. And I’m very excited about what this order means for both of our companies. I think, you know, we are both located here in Seattle and we have employees with spouses, parents, sons, and daughters that are Boeing employees. The tied between our two companies are deep and we’re excited about our futures together. With the order over the next four years, we will take delivery of 68 new 737-9 aircraft, 13 of them leased, which will largely replace our Airbus fleet. We then have options for up to 52 additional aircraft through 2026 for when we find opportunities for growth. The agreement features significant flexibility in the deferral rates for the majority of the orders and full substitution rights to other MAX models. Shell for sale the newer generation 737-9 aircraft have material lease, superior economics relative to our existing older technology A320s, did a better fuel efficiency, lower maintenance costs, and 20 incremental seats. Each replacement will improve unit costs and provide incremental revenue opportunity for our P&L. And as noted above, the order allowed us to revise our 2021 cash outlays for CapEx as we will first consume existing PDPs with Boeing before beginning to pay into PDPs again in 2022. As a result, our 2021 capital expenditures will remain low at approximately $150 million to $250 million. And with that, we will go to your questions.