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eastunder

09/29/20 2:57 PM

#11514 RE: eastunder #11374

SAVE 16.04

eastunder

04/13/21 11:00 AM

#12186 RE: eastunder #11374

SAVE upgrade

Apr-13-21 Upgrade Susquehanna from Neutral - to Positive
$50 Price Target


Cpps 35.94

1000/1000 24.56/24.58 +11k
+500/500 on build LT





eastunder

08/20/21 12:48 PM

#12536 RE: eastunder #11374

Spirit Airlines Slashes Guidance After Operational Meltdown
Canceling nearly 3,000 flights in the span of 11 days will have a devastating impact on the budget carrier's third-quarter earnings.

Adam Levine-Weinberg
https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/08/18/spirit-airlines-slashes-guidance-after-operational/?source=eptyholnk0000202&utm_source=yahoo-host&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=article

Aug 18, 2021 at 7:21AM

A combination of severe weather and staffing shortages forced Spirit Airlines to cancel a huge proportion of its flights earlier this month.
Spirit reduced its Q3 revenue expectations by up to $150 million, while operating expenses will exceed its previous outlook.
The recent crisis is unlikely to have a meaningful impact on Spirit's long-term profitability.

Just a few weeks ago, Spirit Airlines' (NYSE:SAVE) recovery seemed to be accelerating. The budget airline posted a much smaller second-quarter loss than analysts had expected. It returned to profitability in June, and management projected further improvement in the third quarter.

Unfortunately, Spirit suffered a massive operational meltdown beginning a few weeks ago. The fallout has forced the company to dramatically cut its third-quarter guidance.

Flight disruptions spiraled out of control

Over the past few months, Spirit Airlines has steadily ramped up its flight schedule beyond pre-pandemic levels. As of late July, the carrier expected to increase third-quarter capacity by 10.6% compared to 2019, with further acceleration in its growth rate planned for the fourth quarter.

However, like many businesses in the U.S., Spirit Airlines has struggled to meet its hiring goals in 2021. It still had enough staff to keep things running when everything was going smoothly, but it had no margin for error. Alas, a series of severe weather events during July caused many Spirit Airlines crews to wind up out of position and thus unable to staff their scheduled flights. Eventually, the airline ran out of reserve crews, too, leading to a full-scale meltdown.

At the peak of the crisis in early August, Spirit canceled more than 40% of its schedule for five consecutive days -- including three days when it operated less than half of its scheduled flights. In total, Spirit Airlines canceled 2,826 flights during the 11-day period from July 30 to Aug. 9. Many of its remaining flights were delayed.

Tallying the damage

The raft of flight cancellations in late July and early August caused Spirit to miss out on about $50 million of revenue, according to the budget airline's recent investor update.

The staffing shortage hasn't gone away, so Spirit Airlines has trimmed its schedule for the rest of the third quarter to prevent a repeat of its recent problems. In addition, booking trends have slowed and the cancellation rate has increased this month. To some extent, the sharp uptick in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations over the past month associated with the Delta variant explains the deterioration in demand trends. But management acknowledges that Spirit's highly publicized operational meltdown has also driven some customers away, at least in the short term.

These factors will reduce Q3 revenue by another $80 million to $100 million, according to the company. As a result, Spirit now expects to generate $885 million to $955 million of revenue this quarter.

Meanwhile, Spirit incurred significant incremental expenses because of its operational disruptions, mainly from the cost of paying for hotel rooms and buying tickets on other airlines for customers whose flights were canceled. The company estimates that operating expenses for the quarter will come in between $1.03 billion and $1.04 billion, $30 million higher than its previous forecast.

Just a few weeks ago, Spirit Airlines confidently projected that its EBITDA margin would rise to double-digit territory this quarter. Now, it expects to record negative adjusted EBITDA for the period.

Spirit will recover with time
Spirit Airlines may have lost some customers for good this month. Yet most people tend to have short memories when it comes to air travel chaos. (The same is true of many other things. Remember when people believed nobody would eat at Chipotle Mexican Grill again due to repeated food safety problems?)

As long as Spirit avoids similar operational meltdowns in the future, most consumers will eventually forget about what happened earlier this month. The budget carrier's rock-bottom costs and massive ancillary revenue streams will enable it to underprice rivals for the foreseeable future, and cheap fares are hard to resist. By the time the airline industry finishes recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic in two or three years, Spirit Airlines will likely be earning record profits, too.

eastunder

08/20/21 12:50 PM

#12537 RE: eastunder #11374

SAVE 21.14 gap 11-23-20

NTS: 17.84 gap & 10.47 gap

eastunder

09/27/21 10:39 AM

#12591 RE: eastunder #11374

SAVE

Track for tag?
(smas moving up)

50d 25.59
20d 25.03
gap 26.98
gap 23.13
gap 17.94
gap 10.47

eastunder

02/07/22 10:41 AM

#12866 RE: eastunder #11374

SAVE: Under the terms of the merger agreement, which has been unanimously approved by the boards of directors of both companies, Spirit equity holders will receive 1.9126 shares of Frontier plus $2.13 in cash for each existing Spirit share they own. This implies a value of $25.83 per Spirit share at Frontier’s closing stock price of $12.39 on February 4, 2022, representing a premium of 19% over the February 4, 2022, closing price of Spirit, and a 26% premium based on the 30 trading-day volume-weighted average prices of Frontier and Spirit. The transaction values Spirit at a fully diluted equity value of $2.9 billion, and a transaction value of $6.6 billion when accounting for the assumption of net debt and operating lease liabilities.