Showing posts with label American Airlines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Airlines. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Analysis: Gol bond rally seen limited as Delta deal falls short

Analysis: Gol bond rally seen limited as Delta deal falls short

Stock Market Predictions

SAO PAULO (Global Markets) - Gol Linhas Aereas' (GOLL4.SA) (GOL.N) sale of a minority stake to Delta Air Lines Inc (DAL.N), is sparking gains in Gol's bonds, but some investors say the rally will be short-lived.

While Delta's investment of $100 million for a 3 percent stake will earn it a seat on Gol's board, it will not bolster the Brazilian airline's finances as much as bondholders hoped.

The benefits of codesharing and shared efficiencies between the airlines also pale in comparison to the takeover of rival TAM (TAMM4.SA)(TAM.N) by Chile's LAN Airlines LAN.SNLAN.N, which promises $400 million a year in cost savings.

Yields on Gol's dollar-denominated notes due in 2020 have tightened more than 70 basis points since Wednesday, when the alliance was announced, to 10.40 percent early on Friday. Yields move inversely to prices and decline as market risk perceptions of the bond improves.

But hopes that Gol's yields will converge to levels similar to those of TAM's comparable bonds will likely fade, as the rush of enthusiasm following the Delta deal wanes, according to fund manager Leonardo Kestelman of Dinosaur Securities in Sao Paulo.

"From a credit perspective, the TAM-LAN deal was more decisive," said Kestelman, who manages about $800 million in bonds. "The yield convergence process will be temporary since Gol and Delta didn't go as far as TAM did with LAN."

The deal does not significantly shift Gol's debt profile, he said. Delta's investment is a drop in the bucket compared to Gol's net debt of 2.6 billion reais ($1.4 billion), or about 8 times its operating earnings over the past 12 months.

TAM's net debt is about 5 times its operating profit. The yield on its dollar note due in 2020 is now 7.87 percent, representing a 2.54 percentage-point difference to Gol's yields. The difference was 3 percentage points on Monday, according to Thomson Global Markets data.

Bond investor Mark Christensen of DoubleLine Capital LP said Gol's cash position is stronger than TAM's, and its short-term debt exposure is lower, but investors would feel safer if Gol came entirely under the protection of a bigger player like Delta.

Gol's short-term debt represents only 9 percent of total liabilities, compared with 21 percent for TAM. Gol is rated B-plus by Standard & Poor's, one level above TAM's B rating.

"We're going to have a stronger balance sheet and capital structure," after the Delta deal, Gol's Chief Financial Officer Leonardo Pereira told analysts on a conference call.

TOUGH OUTLOOK

Gol could see gains in its bonds limited by challenges confronting the industry, as fuel costs have risen and a glut of new capacity has come onto the Brazilian market this year.

Air traffic growth is also slowing sharply in Brazil because of congested airports and consumers' cooling appetites in the face of higher ticket prices.

Citigroup analyst Stephen Trent said Gol is particularly hemmed in by available flight times at the busiest airports and has struggled to fill seats, flying emptier planes in October than its rivals.

Gol also suffers more from spikes in dollar-linked fuel prices than TAM, because it has more revenue denominated in Brazilian reais.

"Given the tough outlook for the sector, the chances of positive news flow that could trigger the tightening of Gol bonds seem to be limited in the short term, and both bonds are tending to trade sideways," Ciro Matuo, a credit market analyst with Itau BBA in Sao Paulo, wrote in a note to clients.

With Delta booking more passengers on its flights, Gol is hoping to boost its load factor, a gauge of seat occupancy, where it has lagged behind rivals even as the airline cut fares. Cost savings through the alliance could also improve measures of Gol's operating costs, which are running above TAM's.

The deal's biggest winner may be Delta, which gains much better access Latin America's leading air travel market and its attractive yields, a metric of ticket pricing.

Gol agreed to appoint a Delta representative to its board as long as the U.S. company retains a minimum 50 percent of the acquired shares. Delta agreed not to sell the stake within the next 12 months or to add to it without Gol's consent.

Headwinds in Brazil's air travel industry have driven a wave of consolidation, including Gol's deal to buy smaller rival WebJet and TAM's talks to buy a 31 percent share of TRIP, leaving fewer local partners for foreign carriers.

In announcing the alliance with Delta, Gol executives acknowledged that a codesharing agreement with American Airlines will end in September next year.

Delta's investment in Gol came just days after American Airlines' parent, AMR Corp (AMR.N), filed for bankruptcy, citing the carrier's uncompetitive cost structure.

Delta carried 15 percent of the passenger traffic between Brazil and the United States last year, trailing TAM and American, which both carried over 30 percent of passengers.

($1=1.81 reais)

Monday, September 25, 2017

Airline shares fall as UAL forecast disappoints

Airline shares fall as UAL forecast disappoints

Stock Market Predictions

NEW YORK (Global Markets) - Shares of United Continental Holdings Inc (UAL.N) and other airlines fell in midday trading on Friday after the parent of United Air Lines and Continental Airlines forecast second-quarter revenue below Wall Street expectations.

UAL shares were down $2.30, or 9.2 percent, at $22.83 on the New York Stock Exchange.

The NYSEArca Airline Index .XAL, a broad measure of the sector, was down 2.7 percent. Delta Air Lines (DAL.N) lost 6.3 percent and U.S. Airways Group (LCC.N) fell 4.7 percent.

UAL said in a regulatory filing on Thursday that consolidated passenger revenue per available seat mile would rise between 8.3 percent and 9.3 percent in the second quarter. Analysts were expecting a double-digit increase.

UAL cited the impact of a transatlantic joint venture revenue-sharing agreement, and other items, but said demand was consistent with its expectation for a slow, steady recovery.

UBS analysts cut their price target on UAL shares to $36 from $39, saying estimates for second-quarter earnings per share were about 30 cents too high.

Analysts, on average, estimate UAL will earn $1.54 per share in the quarter. The average estimate was about 6 cents higher a month ago, according to Thomson Global Markets I/B/E/S.

Airlines report unit revenue to enable direct comparisons between carriers of varying sizes, a UAL spokesman said.

AMR Corp (AMR.N), parent of American Airlines, on Friday forecast second-quarter consolidated unit revenue will increase between 4.5 percent and 5.5 percent year-over-year. AMR shares (AMR.N) fell 5.6 percent.

Earlier this month, the trade group that represents most global airlines slashed its full-year industry profit forecast by more than half. The International Air Transport Association cited high oil prices and turmoil in Japan. [ID:nL3E7H605H]

(Reporting by Nick Zieminski, editing by Gerald E. McCormick and John Wallace)

Sunday, August 13, 2017

AMR shares down as analyst sees more distress

AMR shares down as analyst sees more distress

Stock Market Predictions

(Global Markets) - Shares of American Airlines parent AMR Corp (AMR.N) fell more than 5 percent on Friday as a Morningstar analyst said the carrier is likely headed for bankruptcy.

Analyst Basili Alukos said based on information disclosed this week during AMR's earnings conference call, the company's cash burn may increase to the point that it may run out of cash over the next five years.

The disclosures Alukos cited include AMR saying it has no unencumbered assets left on its balance sheet and that it expects to release about $800 million of assets next year to use for secured transactions.

He also said AMR's conference call revealed that the company had a $250 million drop in cash because of frequent-flyer mile redemption. He added the company likely has further liability tied to those miles.

"Unless AMR receives a substantial cash infusion or earns loan forbearance, we believe the company will eventually succumb to financial distress," Alukos said in a client note on Friday.

Speculation that AMR, which faces higher labor costs than its major U.S. peers that have restructured, could be a bankruptcy candidate boiled over earlier this month. The company's shares plunged 41 percent on October 3 on growing fears it could be headed for bankruptcy.

AMR, the third-biggest U.S. carrier after United Continental Holdings (UAL.N) and Delta Air Lines (DAL.N), reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss this week, blaming higher fuel costs and a spike in the dollar's value that eroded overseas sales.

Wolfe Trahan analyst Hunter Keay said in a published note on Thursday that while AMR will likely post "deep losses" in 2012 and 2013 unless there is a significant change to existing labor contracts, he added, "we do not believe AMR to be in near to medium term risk of insolvency."

Shares of AMR were down 5.2 percent to $2.73 at mid-afternoon after falling more than 7 percent earlier. Other major airline stocks also eased as oil prices rose on Friday [ID:nL5E7LL2CX]. The Arca Airline index .XAL was down 0.3 percent.

(Reporting by Karen Jacobs; Editing by Richard Chang)