Pedro Heilbron
Analyst · Raymond James. Your line is open
Thank you Daniel. Good morning to all and thanks for participating in our fourth quarter earnings call. Before we begin, I'd like to thank all our coworkers for their commitment to the company and recognize their continuous efforts and dedication to keep Copa at the forefront of Latin American aviation. To them as always, my utmost respect and admiration. Today we're glad to report strong financial results for the fourth quarter of 2021. During the quarter, international air travel demand in Latin America continued to recover, which allowed us to end the fourth quarter with 83% of Q4 2019 ASMs. Compared to the third quarter of 2021, unit revenues improved 11.2% with solid gains in both load factor and yield, while increasing capacity 16%. Adjusted unit costs excluding fuel came in at $0.061 for the quarter, a 2.4% reduction when compared to Q3 of 2021. For the quarter, we reported an adjusted operating profit of $115 million and an adjusted operating margin of 20.1%, an improvement of almost nine percentage points quarter-over-quarter and our best results since the beginning of the pandemic. José will provide further details on our fourth quarter financials. Now turning to the main highlights for full year 2021. Excluding special items, we would have reported a net profit of $2.7 million and an operating profit of $85.6 million with an operating margin of 5.8%. Overall, a strong result when compared to what we expected at the beginning of the year. We finalized the sale and delivery of our Embraer-190 and now operate an all-Boeing 737 fleet. We restarted 737 MAX 9 operations and received seven additional aircraft during the year to end 2021 with a total of 14 MAX 9. The additional aircraft also equipped with our Dreams business class cabin would allow us to provide world-class comfort to our business class passenger in more markets. In December, we launched our first new destination since the beginning of the pandemic by starting service to Armenia and Cúcuta in Colombia and Atlanta in the US. With these additions, we ended the year providing service to 68 destinations in North, Central South America and the Caribbean, strengthening our position as the most complete and convenient hub in Latin America. And Copa Holdings was recently recognized by Cirium for the eighth consecutive year, as the most on-time airline in Latin America during 2021. In fact, Copa's on-time performance was again the highest of any airline in all of the Americas. I'd like to take this opportunity to recognize our more than 6,000 Copa and Wingo employees for everything they do day in and day out to deliver a world-class travel experience to our passengers. Turning now to Wingo. It continued its regional expansion during the year, adding four new routes from Panama City to San José, Costa Rica; from Bogota to Lima; from Cali to Cancun; and from Medellín to Punta Cana. To summarize, in Q4 2021, we delivered our strongest quarterly financial results since the beginning of the pandemic. We were able to reach 83% of our pre-pandemic capacity in the fourth quarter. Our team continues to deliver world-leading operational results with Copa being recognized as the most on-time airline in the Americas. We delivered lower unit costs compared to pre-pandemic levels on less capacity. And we're strategically focused on restarting destinations and adding markets, strengthening our position as the most complete and convenient hub in Latin America. Overall, the recovery in demand and rebuilding of our network in 2021 was quite encouraging. Now, as I'm sure you're aware, 2022 is off to a much more challenging start. The Omicron variant is impacting both international travel demand in the region and the number of crews we have available to fly. Due to a reduced number of available pilots and flight attendants, we canceled approximately 1,000 flights during the month of January and February, which is 4% our Q1 schedule. Fortunately, we do not expect any crew availability cancellations for March. We're seeing however, an industry slowdown in bookings for Q1 travel that will cause our load factors and unit revenues to come in lower than the fourth quarter of 2021. José will share our Q1 guidance during his presentation. I'd like to reiterate, that we have a proven and strong business model, which is based on operating the best and most convenient network for intra-Latin America travel from our Hub of the Americas, leveraging Panama's advantageous geographic position, with low unit cost, best on-time performance and strongest balance sheet. And we expect that going forward, our Hub of the Americas will be an even more valuable source of strategic advantage. Now, I'll turn it over to José, who will go over our financial results in more detail.
José Montero: Thank you, Pedro. Good morning everyone. Thanks for being with us today. I'd like to join Pedro in acknowledging our great team for all their efforts and their great spirit during these many months of the pandemic. I will start by going over our fourth quarter results. Capacity came in at 5.1 billion available seat miles, which amounts to 83% of the capacity that we operated during the fourth quarter of 2019. Load factor came in at an average of 83.5% for the quarter, a 4.2 percentage point increase compared to Q3, while operating 16% more ASMs. We reported a net profit of $114.4 million or $2.69 per share. Excluding special items, we would have reported a net profit of $84.1 million or $1.98 per share. Special items for the quarter are mainly comprised of an unrealized mark-to-market loss of $8.9 million related to the company's convertible notes issued in 2020 and a reversal of $39.2 million related to the company's provision for the return of leased aircraft. We reported a quarterly operating profit of $155 million. Excluding the reversal of $39.2 million, we would have reported an adjusted operating profit of $115.8 million for the quarter. Our reported operating margin was 27%. Excluding these special items, we would have reported an operating margin of 20.1%. Unit costs, excluding fuel, were better than in the third quarter, coming in at $0.061 per ASM, driven by our continued focus on reducing expenses, as well as a quarter-over-quarter capacity growth of 16%. Our yields for the quarter came in at $0.127, an increase of 5.8% compared to the third quarter, while operating more ASMs. I'd like to highlight that our cargo revenues for the quarter also came in higher quarter-over-quarter and over 60% above our cargo revenues for Q4, 2019, driven by an improved cargo demand environment in the region. Turning to cash. During the fourth quarter we had a cash buildup of approximately $84 million, driven mainly by increased sales during the period, as well as by our continued focusing our costs. As a reminder, for our cash build measure, we exclude all extraordinary proceeds from asset sales, but include CapEx, a payment of debt principal and interest, as well as the payment of our leases. Now I'd like to go over our full-year 2021 financial highlights. Our reported net income came in at $39.9 million. Excluding special items, we would have reported an adjusted net income of $2.7 million or adjusted earnings per share of $0.06. Special items for the year included $22.8 million unrealized mark-to-market loss related to the company's convertible notes, passenger revenue adjustment of $20.8 million corresponding to unredeemed coupons from 2019 and 2020 sales and a reversal of $39.2 million in the company's provision for the return of leased aircraft. Reported operating profits came in at $145.7 million. Excluding the special items, we would have reported an operating profit of $85.6 million and a 5.8% operating margin. Finally, for the full year, we had a cash buildup of $133 million. I'm going to spend some time now discussing our balance sheet and liquidity. So at the end of 2021, we had assets of close to $4.2 billion and our cash short to long-term investments ended at $1.2 billion. We also ended the quarter with an aggregate amount of $295 million in unutilized committed credit facilities, which brought our total liquidity to more than $1.5 billion. In terms of debt, we ended the quarter with $1.6 billion in debt and lease liabilities, similar levels to the ones reported for the end of the third quarter. And our adjusted net debt-to-EBITDA ratio came in at 1.05 times. Turning now to our fleet. During the fourth quarter, we received one 737 MAX 9 and decided to keep three 737-700s, previously consider as assets held for sale. During the quarter we also completed the conversion of one of our 737-800s into a freighter. We ended the year with 91 aircraft; 68 737-800s, 14 737 MAX 9s and nine 737-700s. These figures include three 737-700s which are currently in temporary storage and the 737-800 courier. In Q1 of this year, we have received one 737 MAX 9 and expect to receive one additional MAX 9 aircraft to end the quarter with 16 MAX 9s and a total fleet of 93 aircraft. To our outlook. Based on the current state of the demand environment, air travel restrictions and the impact of the Omicron variant, we can provide the following guidance for the first quarter of 2022. We expect capacity to be approximately 88% of Q1 2019 levels or about 5.7 billion ASMs and we expect our operating margin to be in the range of 3% to 6%. We're basing our Q1 2022 outlook on the following assumptions: revenues of approximately 82% of Q1 2019 levels or approximately $550 million, CASM ex-fuel of approximately $0.06 and an all-in fuel price of $2.79 per gallon, an increase of approximately 15% compared to the average fuel price in the fourth quarter of 2021. Given the recent volatility in the environment, we believe it is premature to give complete full year guidance. However preliminarily we expect our full year 2022 capacity to be approximately 93% of 2019 ASMs and our CASM ex-fuel to be in the range of $0.059. Thank you. And with that, we'll open the call for some questions.