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Account
Alaska Airlines
ALK
#3284
Rank
$4.57 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$39.91
Share price
8.07%
Change (1 day)
-2.68%
Change (1 year)
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๐ด Travel
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Annual Reports (10-K)
Alaska Airlines
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2016 Q2
Alaska Airlines - 10-Q quarterly report FY2016 Q2
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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, DC 20549
FORM 10-Q
T
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
June 30, 2016
OR
£
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from to
Commission File Number 1-8957
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
Delaware
91-1292054
(State of Incorporation)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
19300 International Boulevard, Seattle, Washington 98188
Telephone: (206) 392-5040
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes
T
No
£
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes
T
No
£
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer or a smaller reporting company. See definitions of “large accelerated filer”, "accelerated filer" and "smaller reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act (Check one):
Large accelerated filer
T
Accelerated filer
£
Non-accelerated filer
£
Smaller reporting company
£
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.): Yes
£
No
T
The registrant has
123,089,982
common shares, par value $0.01, outstanding at
July 31, 2016
.
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
FORM 10-Q FOR THE QUARTER ENDED
JUNE 30, 2016
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART I.
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
4
ITEM 1.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
4
ITEM 2.
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
19
ITEM 3.
QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURE ABOUT MARKET RISK
36
ITEM 4.
CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
36
PART II.
OTHER INFORMATION
38
ITEM 1.
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
38
ITEM 1A.
RISK FACTORS
38
ITEM 2.
UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS
38
ITEM 3.
DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES
38
ITEM 4.
MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES
38
ITEM 5.
OTHER INFORMATION
38
ITEM 6.
EXHIBITS
39
SIGNATURES
39
As used in this Form 10-Q, the terms “Air Group,” the "Company," “our,” “we” and "us," refer to Alaska Air Group, Inc. and its subsidiaries, unless the context indicates otherwise. Alaska Airlines, Inc. and Horizon Air Industries, Inc. are referred to as “Alaska” and “Horizon,” respectively, and together as our “airlines.”
2
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
In addition to historical information, this Form 10-Q contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are those that predict or describe future events or trends and that do not relate solely to historical matters. You can generally identify forward-looking statements as statements containing the words "believe," "expect," "will," "anticipate," "intend," "estimate," "project," "assume" or other similar expressions, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from historical experience or the Company’s present expectations. Some of the things that could cause our actual results to differ from our expectations are:
•
our pending acquisition and the subsequent merger of Virgin America Inc. (Virgin America);
•
the competitive environment in our industry;
•
changes in our operating costs, primarily fuel, which can be volatile;
•
general economic conditions, including the impact of those conditions on customer travel behavior;
•
our ability to meet our cost reduction goals;
•
operational disruptions;
•
an aircraft accident or incident;
•
labor disputes and our ability to attract and retain qualified personnel;
•
the concentration of our revenue from a few key markets;
•
actual or threatened terrorist attacks, global instability and potential U.S. military actions or activities;
•
our reliance on automated systems and the risks associated with changes made to those systems;
•
changes in laws and regulations.
You should not place undue reliance on our forward-looking statements because the matters they describe are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other unpredictable factors, many of which are beyond our control. Our forward-looking statements are based on the information currently available to us and speak only as of the date on which this report was filed with the SEC. We expressly disclaim any obligation to issue any updates or revisions to our forward-looking statements, even if subsequent events cause our expectations to change regarding the matters discussed in those statements. Over time, our actual results, performance or achievements will likely differ from the anticipated results, performance or achievements that are expressed or implied by our forward-looking statements, and such differences might be significant and materially adverse to our shareholders. For a discussion of these and other risk factors, see Item 1A. "Risk Factors” of the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
, and Item 1A. "Risk Factors" included herein. Please consider our forward-looking statements in light of those risks as you read this report.
3
PART I
ITEM 1. CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(unaudited)
(in millions)
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
ASSETS
Current Assets
Cash and cash equivalents
$
81
$
73
Marketable securities
1,526
1,255
Total cash and marketable securities
1,607
1,328
Receivables - net
254
212
Inventories and supplies - net
45
51
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
97
72
Total Current Assets
2,003
1,663
Property and Equipment
Aircraft and other flight equipment
6,198
5,690
Other property and equipment
994
955
Deposits for future flight equipment
551
771
7,743
7,416
Less accumulated depreciation and amortization
2,784
2,614
Total Property and Equipment - Net
4,959
4,802
Other Assets
73
65
Total Assets
$
7,035
$
6,530
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.
4
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(unaudited)
(in millions, except share amounts)
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities
Accounts payable
$
78
$
63
Accrued wages, vacation and payroll taxes
239
298
Air traffic liability
870
669
Other accrued liabilities
757
661
Current portion of long-term debt
117
114
Total Current Liabilities
2,061
1,805
Long-Term Debt, Net of Current Portion
509
569
Other Liabilities and Credits
Deferred income taxes
721
682
Deferred revenue
480
431
Obligation for pension and postretirement medical benefits
271
270
Other liabilities
366
362
1,838
1,745
Commitments and Contingencies
Shareholders' Equity
Preferred stock, $0.01 par value, Authorized: 5,000,000 shares, none issued or outstanding
—
—
Common stock, $0.01 par value, Authorized: 200,000,000 shares, Issued: 2016 - 128,941,102 shares; 2015 - 128,442,099 shares, Outstanding: 2016 - 123,079,519 shares; 2015 - 125,175,325 shares
1
1
Capital in excess of par value
91
73
Treasury stock (common), at cost: 2016 - 5,861,583 shares; 2015 - 3,266,774 shares
(444
)
(250
)
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
(287
)
(303
)
Retained earnings
3,266
2,890
2,627
2,411
Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
$
7,035
$
6,530
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.
5
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(unaudited)
Three Months Ended June 30,
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in millions, except per share amounts)
2016
2015
2016
2015
Operating Revenues
Passenger
Mainline
$
1,036
$
1,019
$
1,963
$
1,920
Regional
227
212
433
398
Total passenger revenue
1,263
1,231
2,396
2,318
Freight and mail
27
30
51
53
Other - net
204
176
394
335
Total Operating Revenues
1,494
1,437
2,841
2,706
Operating Expenses
Wages and benefits
332
305
668
611
Variable incentive pay
32
32
64
58
Aircraft fuel, including hedging gains and losses
201
261
368
496
Aircraft maintenance
65
52
133
115
Aircraft rent
26
26
55
52
Landing fees and other rentals
63
66
143
137
Contracted services
60
51
120
102
Selling expenses
55
54
104
107
Depreciation and amortization
92
79
180
155
Food and beverage service
31
28
62
53
Third-party regional carrier expense
24
17
47
33
Other
81
94
175
177
Special items - merger costs
14
—
14
—
Total Operating Expenses
1,076
1,065
2,133
2,096
Operating Income
418
372
708
610
Nonoperating Income (Expense)
Interest income
7
6
13
11
Interest expense
(9
)
(11
)
(22
)
(22
)
Interest capitalized
7
8
15
16
Other - net
(3
)
1
(2
)
1
2
4
4
6
Income before income tax
420
376
712
616
Income tax expense
160
142
268
233
Net Income
$
260
$
234
$
444
$
383
Basic Earnings Per Share:
$
2.11
$
1.80
$
3.58
$
2.93
Diluted Earnings Per Share:
$
2.10
$
1.79
$
3.56
$
2.91
Shares used for computation:
Basic
123.250
129.236
123.900
130.173
Diluted
123.988
130.255
124.715
131.271
Cash dividend declared per share:
$
0.275
$
0.20
$
0.550
$
0.40
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.
6
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE OPERATIONS
(unaudited)
Three Months Ended June 30,
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
2016
2015
Net Income
$
260
$
234
$
444
$
383
Other Comprehensive Income (Loss):
Related to marketable securities:
Unrealized holding gains (losses) arising during the period
7
(5
)
19
2
Reclassification of (gains) losses into Other-net nonoperating income (expense)
(1
)
—
(1
)
—
Income tax effect
(2
)
2
(6
)
(1
)
Total
4
(3
)
12
1
Related to employee benefit plans:
Reclassification of net pension expense into Wages and benefits
5
5
10
8
Income tax effect
(2
)
(2
)
(4
)
(3
)
Total
3
3
6
5
Related to interest rate derivative instruments:
Unrealized holding gains (losses) arising during the period
(2
)
1
(7
)
(3
)
Reclassification of (gains) losses into Aircraft rent
2
1
3
3
Income tax effect
—
(1
)
2
—
Total
—
1
(2
)
—
Other Comprehensive Income
7
1
16
6
Comprehensive Income
$
267
$
235
$
460
$
389
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.
7
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(unaudited)
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income
$
444
$
383
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization
180
155
Stock-based compensation and other
13
14
Changes in certain assets and liabilities:
Changes in deferred tax provision
41
(44
)
Increase (decrease) in air traffic liability
201
209
Increase (decrease) in deferred revenue
48
27
Other - net
(28
)
145
Net cash provided by operating activities
899
889
Cash flows from investing activities:
Property and equipment additions:
Aircraft and aircraft purchase deposits
(268
)
(490
)
Other flight equipment
(31
)
(43
)
Other property and equipment
(41
)
(26
)
Total property and equipment additions, including capitalized interest
(340
)
(559
)
Purchases of marketable securities
(610
)
(711
)
Sales and maturities of marketable securities
357
676
Proceeds from disposition of assets and changes in restricted deposits
3
—
Net cash used in investing activities
(590
)
(594
)
Cash flows from financing activities:
Long-term debt payments
(57
)
(58
)
Common stock repurchases
(193
)
(262
)
Dividends paid
(68
)
(52
)
Other financing activities
17
15
Net cash used in financing activities
(301
)
(357
)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
8
(62
)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year
73
107
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the period
$
81
$
45
Supplemental disclosure:
Cash paid during the period for:
Interest (net of amount capitalized)
$
8
$
8
Income taxes paid (received)
182
108
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements.
8
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(unaudited)
NOTE 1. GENERAL AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Organization and Basis of Presentation
The interim condensed consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Alaska Air Group, Inc. (Air Group or the Company) and its primary subsidiaries, Alaska Airlines, Inc. (Alaska) and Horizon Air Industries, Inc. (Horizon), through which the Company conducts substantially all of its operations. All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated. These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States (GAAP) for interim financial information. Consistent with these requirements, this Form 10-Q does not include all the information required by GAAP for complete financial statements. As a result, this Form 10-Q should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial Statements and accompanying Notes in the Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
. In the opinion of management, all adjustments have been made that are necessary to present fairly the Company’s financial position as of
June 30, 2016
, as well as the results of operations for the
three and six
months ended
June 30, 2016
and
2015
. The adjustments made were of a normal recurring nature.
In preparing these statements, the Company is required to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of contingent liabilities, as well as the reported amounts of revenues and expenses. Due to seasonal variations in the demand for air travel, the volatility of aircraft fuel prices, changes in global economic conditions, changes in the competitive environment, and other factors, operating results for the
three and six
months ended
June 30, 2016
are not necessarily indicative of operating results for the entire year.
Certain reclassifications have been made to prior year financial statements to conform with classifications used in the current year.
Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
In May 2014, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update 2014-09, "Revenue from Contracts with Customers" (ASU 2014-09), which requires an entity to recognize the amount of revenue to which it expects to be entitled for the transfer of promised goods or services to customers. The ASU will replace most existing revenue recognition guidance in U.S. GAAP when it becomes effective. The new standard is effective for the Company on January 1, 2018. The standard permits the use of either the retrospective or cumulative effect transition method. At this time, the Company believes the most significant impact to the financial statements will be in Mileage Plan revenues and liabilities. The Company currently uses the incremental cost approach for miles earned through travel. This standard eliminates that option and the Company will be required to increase its liability for earned miles through a relative selling price model. The Company has not evaluated the full impact of the standard, although application is expected to result in a material increase to Deferred Revenue. The Company has not yet selected a transition method.
In April 2015, the FASB issued ASU 2015-03, "Interest - Imputation of Interest" (Subtopic 835-30), which requires debt issuance costs related to a debt liability be presented as a direct deduction from the carrying value of the debt liability. The amendment was adopted as of January 1, 2016. Prior period debt balances have been adjusted to reflect the adoption of ASU 2015-03. The adoption of the ASU had no impact on the Statements of Operations or retained earnings.
In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-02, "Leases" (Topic 842), which requires lessees to recognize assets and liabilities for leases currently classified as operating leases. Under the new standard a lessee will recognize a liability on the balance sheet representing the lease payments owed, and a right-of-use-asset representing its right to use the underlying asset for the lease term. For leases with a term of 12 months or less, a lessee is permitted to make an accounting policy election not to recognize lease assets and lease liabilities. The new standard is effective for the Company on January 1, 2019. Early adoption of the standard is permitted. The Company is evaluating the effect that ASU 2016-02 will have on its financial statements and related disclosures. The Company has not yet determined whether it will early adopt the standard.
In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-08, "Revenue from Contracts with Customers" (Topic 606), Principal versus Agent Considerations. The proposed standard provides guidance when a revenue transaction involves a third party in providing goods or services to a customer in determining whether the Company is considered the principal or the agent in the transaction. When an entity is engaged to provide the underlying good or service, such entity is classified as the principal in the transaction. When an entity is engaged to arrange for a third party to provide the goods or services, such entity is classified as the agent in the transaction. This ASU has the same effective date as the new revenue standard. Entities are required to adopt this ASU using
9
the same transition method they use to adopt the new revenue accounting standard. The Company is evaluating the effect that ASU 2016-08 will have on its consolidated financial statements and related disclosures. The Company has not yet elected a transition method nor has it determined whether it will early adopt.
In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-09, "Compensation - Stock Compensation" (Topic 718). The proposed standard simplifies several aspects of accounting for employee share-based payment awards, including the accounting for income taxes, forfeitures, and statutory tax withholding requirements, as well as classification in the statement of cash flows. The Company is evaluating the effect of ASU 2016-09 on the consolidated financial statements and related disclosures. The ASU is effective for the Company beginning January 1, 2017. Early adoption is permitted. The Company has not yet elected a transition method.
NOTE 2. PROPOSED ACQUISITION OF VIRGIN AMERICA INC.
On April 1, 2016 the Company entered into an agreement to acquire Virgin America. The Company has agreed to pay Virgin America shareholders
$57
per share, or approximately
$2.6 billion
, in cash for the outstanding common stock of Virgin America. In addition, the Company expects to assume Virgin America's debt and lease obligations, other than related party debt, on the date of acquisition. The merger has been approved by Virgin America's shareholders and is subject to final approval by various regulatory bodies. We currently expect the transaction will close in the fourth quarter of 2016.
As of
June 30, 2016
the Company has incurred merger costs of
$14 million
. These costs are classified as special items within the Statement of Operations. The Company expects to continue to incur merger costs in the future if the transaction closes.
NOTE 3. CASH, CASH EQUIVALENTS AND MARKETABLE SECURITIES
Components for cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities (in millions):
June 30, 2016
Cost Basis
Unrealized
Gains
Unrealized Losses
Fair Value
Cash
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Cash equivalents
81
—
—
81
Cash and cash equivalents
81
—
—
81
U.S. government and agency securities
430
3
—
433
Foreign government bonds
32
—
—
32
Asset-backed securities
160
1
—
161
Mortgage-backed securities
112
1
—
113
Corporate notes and bonds
762
9
(1
)
770
Municipal securities
17
—
—
17
Marketable securities
1,513
14
(1
)
1,526
Total
$
1,594
$
14
$
(1
)
$
1,607
December 31, 2015
Cost Basis
Unrealized
Gains
Unrealized Losses
Fair Value
Cash
$
4
$
—
$
—
$
4
Cash equivalents
69
—
—
69
Cash and cash equivalents
73
—
—
73
U.S. government and agency securities
254
—
(1
)
253
Foreign government bonds
31
—
—
31
Asset-backed securities
130
—
—
130
Mortgage-backed securities
117
—
(1
)
116
Corporate notes and bonds
711
1
(4
)
708
Municipal securities
17
—
—
17
Marketable securities
1,260
1
(6
)
1,255
Total
$
1,333
$
1
$
(6
)
$
1,328
10
Unrealized losses from fixed-income securities are primarily attributable to changes in interest rates. Management does not believe any remaining unrealized losses represent other-than-temporary impairments based on our evaluation of available evidence as of
June 30, 2016
.
Activity for marketable securities (in millions):
Three Months Ended June 30,
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Proceeds from sales and maturities
$
217
$
417
$
357
$
676
Gross realized gains
2
1
2
2
Gross realized losses
(1
)
(1
)
(1
)
(2
)
Maturities for marketable securities (in millions):
June 30, 2016
Cost Basis
Fair Value
Due in one year or less
$
363
$
363
Due after one year through five years
1,134
1,147
Due after five years through 10 years
16
16
Due after 10 years
—
—
Total
$
1,513
$
1,526
NOTE 4. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
In determining fair value, there is a three-level hierarchy based on the reliability of the inputs used. Level 1 refers to fair values based on quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities, Level 2 refers to fair values estimated using significant other observable inputs and Level 3 refers to fair values estimated using significant unobservable inputs.
Fair Value of Financial Instruments on a Recurring Basis
Fair values of financial instruments on the consolidated balance sheet (in millions):
June 30, 2016
Level 1
Level 2
Total
Assets
Marketable securities
U.S. government and agency securities
$
433
$
—
$
433
Foreign government bonds
—
32
32
Asset-backed securities
—
161
161
Mortgage-backed securities
—
113
113
Corporate notes and bonds
—
770
770
Municipal securities
—
17
17
Total Marketable securities
433
1,093
1,526
Derivative instruments
Fuel hedge call options
—
19
19
Total Assets
433
1,112
1,545
Liabilities
Derivative instruments
Interest rate swap agreements
—
(22
)
(22
)
Total Liabilities
—
(22
)
(22
)
11
December 31, 2015
Level 1
Level 2
Total
Assets
Marketable securities
U.S. government and agency securities
$
253
$
—
$
253
Foreign government bonds
—
31
31
Asset-backed securities
—
130
130
Mortgage-backed securities
—
116
116
Corporate notes and bonds
—
708
708
Municipal securities
—
17
17
Total Marketable securities
253
1,002
1,255
Derivative instruments
Fuel hedge call options
—
4
4
Total Assets
253
1,006
1,259
Liabilities
Derivative instruments
Interest rate swap agreements
—
(18
)
(18
)
Total Liabilities
—
(18
)
(18
)
The Company uses the market and income approach to determine the fair value of marketable securities. U.S. government securities are Level 1 as the fair value is based on quoted prices in active markets. Foreign government bonds, asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, corporate notes and bonds, and municipal securities are Level 2 as the fair value is based on standard valuation models that are calculated based on observable inputs such as quoted interest rates, yield curves, credit ratings of the security and other observable market information.
The Company uses the market approach and the income approach to determine the fair value of derivative instruments. The fair value for fuel hedge call options is determined utilizing an option pricing model based on inputs that are readily available in active markets, or can be derived from information available in active markets. In addition, the fair value considers the exposure to credit losses in the event of non-performance by counterparties. Interest rate swap agreements are Level 2 as the fair value of these contracts is determined based on the difference between the fixed interest rate in the agreements and the observable LIBOR-based interest forward rates at period end, multiplied by the total notional value.
The Company has no financial assets that are measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis at
June 30, 2016
.
Fair Value of Other Financial Instruments
The Company used the following methods and assumptions to determine the fair value of financial instruments that are not recognized at fair value as described below.
Cash and Cash Equivalents
: Carried at amortized cost, which approximates fair value.
Debt
: The carrying amount of the Company's variable-rate debt approximates fair values. For fixed-rate debt, the Company uses the income approach to determine the estimated fair value, by using discounted cash flows using borrowing rates for comparable debt over the weighted life of the outstanding debt. The estimated fair value of the fixed-rate debt is Level 3 as certain inputs used are unobservable.
Fixed-rate debt that is not carried at fair value on the consolidated balance sheet and the estimated fair value of long-term fixed-rate debt (in millions) is as follows:
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Carrying amount
$
474
$
520
Fair value
509
557
12
NOTE 5. MILEAGE PLAN
Alaska's Mileage Plan liabilities and deferrals on the consolidated balance sheets (in millions):
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Current Liabilities:
Other accrued liabilities
$
391
$
368
Other Liabilities and Credits:
Deferred revenue
477
427
Other liabilities
19
19
Total
$
887
$
814
Alaska's Mileage Plan revenue included in the consolidated statements of operations (in millions):
Three Months Ended June 30,
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Passenger revenues
$
73
$
69
$
143
$
134
Other - net revenues
108
82
211
159
Total
$
181
$
151
$
354
$
293
NOTE 6. LONG-TERM DEBT
Long-term debt obligations on the consolidated balance sheet (in millions):
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Fixed-rate notes payable due through 2024
$
474
$
520
Variable-rate notes payable due through 2025
155
166
Less debt issuance costs
(3
)
(3
)
Total debt
626
683
Less current portion
117
114
Long-term debt, less current portion
$
509
$
569
Weighted-average fixed-interest rate
5.7
%
5.7
%
Weighted-average variable-interest rate
2.1
%
1.8
%
During the
six
months ended
June 30, 2016
, the Company made debt payments of
$57 million
. As discussed in Note 1, the Company adopted ASU 2015-03 which resulted in a reclassification of debt issuance costs as an offset to debt in the consolidated balance sheet.
At
June 30, 2016
, long-term debt principal payments for the next five years and thereafter are as follows (in millions):
Total
Remainder of 2016
$
58
2017
121
2018
151
2019
114
2020
116
Thereafter
69
Total
$
629
Bank Lines of Credit
13
The Company has
two
$100 million
credit facilities and
one
$52 million
credit facility. All
three
facilities have variable interest rates based on LIBOR plus a specified margin.
One
of the
$100 million
facilities, which expires in
September 2017
, is secured by aircraft. The other
$100 million
facility, which expires in
March 2017
, is secured by certain accounts receivable, spare engines, spare parts and ground service equipment. The
$52 million
facility expires in October 2016 with a mechanism for annual renewal and is secured by
two
737-800 aircraft. The Company has no immediate plans to borrow using any of these facilities. All
three
credit facilities have a requirement to maintain a minimum unrestricted cash and marketable securities balance of
$500 million
. The Company is in compliance with this covenant at
June 30, 2016
.
NOTE 7. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
The Company has a number of employee benefit plans, including qualified and nonqualified defined-benefit plans, defined-contribution plans, postretirement medical benefits, and long-term disability benefits. In relation to the qualified plans, net periodic benefit costs recognized included the following components for the
three and six
months ended
June 30, 2016
(in millions). Amounts recognized in relation to all other plans were immaterial to the quarter.
Qualified Defined - Benefit Plans
Three Months Ended June 30,
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Service cost
$
9
$
10
$
18
$
20
Interest cost
19
21
37
42
Expected return on assets
(27
)
(30
)
(54
)
(61
)
Recognized actuarial loss (gain)
6
6
12
13
Total
$
7
$
7
$
13
$
14
NOTE 8. COMMITMENTS
Future minimum fixed payments for commitments (in millions):
June 30, 2016
Aircraft Leases
Facility Leases
Aircraft Purchase Commitments
Capacity Purchase Agreements
(a)
Remainder of 2016
$
39
$
47
$
305
$
34
2017
99
90
931
78
2018
90
42
725
81
2019
82
41
648
86
2020
73
40
337
92
Thereafter
400
142
400
745
Total
$
783
$
402
$
3,346
$
1,116
(a)
Includes all non-aircraft lease costs associated with CPA arrangements.
Lease Commitments
At
June 30, 2016
, the Company’s fleet includes lease contracts for
21
B737 aircraft and
15
Q400s. Additionally, the fleet includes
15
lease commitments under the CPA with SkyWest, comprising
6
CRJ-700s and
9
E175s. All lease contracts have remaining noncancelable lease terms ranging from 2016 to 2029. The Company has the option to increase capacity flown by SkyWest with
8
additional E175 aircraft with 2017 and 2018 delivery dates.
The majority of airport and terminal facilities are also leased. Rent expense for aircraft and facility leases was
$63 million
and
$67 million
for the
three
months ended
June 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively. Rent expense for aircraft and facility leases was
$144 million
and
$140 million
for the
six
months ended
June 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively.
Aircraft Purchase Commitments
As of
June 30, 2016
, the Company is committed to purchasing
56
B737 aircraft (
19
737-900ER aircraft and
37
737 MAX aircraft),
33
E175 aircraft and
2
Q400 aircraft, with deliveries in
2016
through
2022
. As of
June 30, 2016
we do not intend to
14
take delivery of the
2
Q400 aircraft that are currently contracted. In addition, the Company has options to purchase
46
B737 aircraft,
30
E175 aircraft and
5
Q400 aircraft, which are not reflected in the commitments table above.
Capacity Purchase Agreements (CPAs)
At
June 30, 2016
, Alaska had CPAs with
three
carriers, including the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary, Horizon. Horizon sells
100%
of its capacity under a CPA with Alaska. In addition, Alaska has CPAs with SkyWest to fly certain routes and PenAir to fly certain routes in the state of Alaska. Under these agreements, Alaska pays the carriers an amount which is based on a determination of their cost of operating those flights and other factors intended to approximate market rates for those services. Future payments (excluding Horizon) are based on minimum levels of flying by the third-party carriers, which could differ materially due to variable payments based on actual levels of flying and certain costs associated with operating flights such as fuel.
Contingencies
The Company is a party to routine litigation matters incidental to its business and with respect to which no material liability is expected. Management believes the ultimate disposition of these matters is not likely to materially affect the Company's financial position or results of operations. This forward-looking statement is based on management's current understanding of the relevant law and facts, and it is subject to various contingencies, including the potential costs and risks associated with litigation and the actions of arbitrators, judges and juries.
NOTE 9. SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Dividends
During the three months ended June 30, 2016, the Company declared and paid cash dividends of
$0.275
per share, or
$34 million
. During the
six
months ended
June 30, 2016
, the Company declared and paid cash dividends of
$0.550
per share, or
$68 million
.
Common Stock Repurchase
In May 2014, the Board of Directors authorized a
$650 million
share repurchase program, which was completed in October 2015. In August 2015, the Board of Directors authorized a
$1 billion
share repurchase program. In the second quarter the Company paused the share repurchase program in advance of the pending acquisition of Virgin America.
Share repurchase activity (in millions, except share amounts):
Three Months Ended June 30,
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Shares
Amount
Shares
Amount
Shares
Amount
Shares
Amount
2015 Repurchase Program - $1 billion
873,396
$
67
—
$
—
2,594,809
$
193
—
$
—
2014 Repurchase Program - $650 million
—
$
—
2,480,807
$
160
—
$
—
4,061,554
$
262
Total
873,396
$
67
2,480,807
$
160
2,594,809
$
193
4,061,554
$
262
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss
Components of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax (in millions):
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Marketable securities
$
9
$
(3
)
Employee benefit plans
(282
)
(288
)
Interest rate derivatives
(14
)
(12
)
Total
$
(287
)
$
(303
)
15
NOTE 10. OPERATING SEGMENT INFORMATION
Air Group has
two
operating airlines - Alaska and Horizon. Each is a regulated airline with separate management teams. To manage the
two
operating airlines and the revenues and expenses associated with the CPAs, management views the business in
three
operating segments:
Alaska Mainline
- The Boeing 737 part of Alaska's business.
Alaska Regional
- Alaska's shorter distance network. In this segment, Alaska Regional records actual on board passenger revenue, less costs such as fuel, distribution costs, and payments made to Horizon, SkyWest and PenAir under CPAs. Additionally, Alaska Regional includes a small allocation of corporate overhead such as IT, finance and other administrative costs incurred by Alaska and on behalf of the regional operations.
Horizon
- Horizon operates regional aircraft. All of Horizon's capacity is sold to Alaska under a CPA. Expenses include those typically borne by regional airlines such as crew costs, ownership costs, station handling costs, and maintenance costs.
16
Additionally, the following table reports “Air Group adjusted,” which is not a measure determined in accordance with GAAP. The Company's chief operating decision-makers and others in management use this measure to evaluate operational performance and determine resource allocations. Adjustments are further explained below in a reconciliation to consolidated GAAP results.
Operating segment information is as follows (in millions):
Three Months Ended June 30, 2016
Alaska
Mainline
Regional
Horizon
Parent & Consolidating
(a)
Air Group Adjusted
(b)
Special Items
(c)
Consolidated
Operating revenues
Passenger
Mainline
$
1,036
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,036
$
—
$
1,036
Regional
—
227
—
—
227
—
227
Total passenger revenues
1,036
227
—
—
1,263
—
1,263
CPA revenues
—
—
110
(110
)
—
—
—
Freight and mail
26
1
—
—
27
—
27
Other - net
184
19
1
—
204
—
204
Total operating revenues
1,246
247
111
(110
)
1,494
—
1,494
Operating expenses
Operating expenses, excluding fuel
679
192
101
(111
)
861
14
875
Economic fuel
180
31
—
—
211
(10
)
201
Total operating expenses
859
223
101
(111
)
1,072
4
1,076
Nonoperating income (expense)
Interest income
6
—
1
—
7
—
7
Interest expense
(4
)
—
(4
)
(1
)
(9
)
—
(9
)
Other
3
—
—
1
4
—
4
5
—
(3
)
—
2
—
2
Income (loss) before income tax
$
392
$
24
$
7
$
1
$
424
$
(4
)
$
420
17
Three Months Ended June 30, 2015
Alaska
Mainline
Regional
Horizon
Parent & Consolidating
(a)
Air Group Adjusted
(b)
Special Items
(c)
Consolidated
Operating revenues
Passenger
Mainline
$
1,019
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,019
$
—
$
1,019
Regional
—
212
—
—
212
—
212
Total passenger revenues
1,019
212
—
—
1,231
—
1,231
CPA revenues
—
—
99
(99
)
—
—
—
Freight and mail
28
2
—
—
30
—
30
Other - net
156
19
1
—
176
—
176
Total operating revenues
1,203
233
100
(99
)
1,437
—
1,437
Operating expenses
Operating expenses, excluding fuel
645
169
90
(100
)
804
—
804
Economic fuel
232
35
—
—
267
(6
)
261
Total operating expenses
877
204
90
(100
)
1,071
(6
)
1,065
Nonoperating income (expense)
Interest income
5
—
—
1
6
—
6
Interest expense
(7
)
—
(1
)
(3
)
(11
)
—
(11
)
Other
7
—
(1
)
3
9
—
9
5
—
(2
)
1
4
—
4
Income (loss) before income tax
$
331
$
29
$
8
$
2
$
370
$
6
$
376
Six Months Ended June 30, 2016
Alaska
Mainline
Regional
Horizon
Parent & Consolidating
(a)
Air Group Adjusted
(b)
Special Items
(c)
Consolidated
Operating revenues
Passenger
Mainline
1,963
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,963
$
—
$
1,963
Regional
—
433
—
—
433
—
433
Total passenger revenues
1,963
433
—
—
2,396
—
2,396
CPA revenues
—
—
213
(213
)
—
—
—
Freight and mail
49
2
—
—
51
—
51
Other - net
356
36
2
—
394
—
394
Total operating revenues
2,368
471
215
(213
)
2,841
—
2,841
Operating expenses
Operating expenses, excluding fuel
1,380
378
206
(213
)
1,751
14
1,765
Economic fuel
324
56
—
—
380
(12
)
368
Total operating expenses
1,704
434
206
(213
)
2,131
2
2,133
Nonoperating income (expense)
Interest income
12
—
1
—
13
—
13
Interest expense
(16
)
—
(5
)
(1
)
(22
)
—
(22
)
Other
10
—
—
3
13
—
13
6
—
(4
)
2
4
—
4
Income (loss) before income tax
$
670
$
37
$
5
$
2
$
714
$
(2
)
$
712
18
Six Months Ended June 30, 2015
Alaska
Mainline
Regional
Horizon
Parent & Consolidating
(a)
Air Group Adjusted
(b)
Special Items
(c)
Consolidated
Operating revenues
Passenger
Mainline
$
1,920
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1,920
$
—
$
1,920
Regional
—
398
—
—
398
—
398
Total passenger revenues
1,920
398
—
—
2,318
—
2,318
CPA revenues
—
—
198
(198
)
—
—
—
Freight and mail
50
3
—
—
53
—
53
Other - net
298
35
2
—
335
—
335
Total operating revenues
2,268
436
200
(198
)
2,706
—
2,706
Operating expenses
Operating expenses, excluding fuel
1,284
333
181
(198
)
1,600
—
1,600
Economic fuel
436
66
—
—
502
(6
)
496
Total operating expenses
1,720
399
181
(198
)
2,102
(6
)
2,096
Nonoperating income (expense)
Interest income
10
—
—
1
11
—
11
Interest expense
(14
)
—
(5
)
(3
)
(22
)
—
(22
)
Other
14
—
—
3
17
—
17
10
—
(5
)
1
6
—
6
Income (loss) before income tax
$
558
$
37
$
14
$
1
$
610
$
6
$
616
(a)
Includes consolidating entries, Parent Company, and other immaterial business units.
(b)
The adjusted column represents the financial information that is reviewed by management to assess performance of operations and determine capital allocations and does not include certain income and charges.
(c)
Includes mark-to-market fuel-hedge accounting charges, and other special items described previously.
Total assets were as follows (in millions):
June 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Alaska
(a)
$
9,101
$
8,127
Horizon
729
717
Parent company
5,200
4,734
Elimination of inter-company accounts
(7,995
)
(7,048
)
Consolidated
$
7,035
$
6,530
(a)
There are no assets associated with capacity purchase flying at Alaska.
ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
OVERVIEW
The following Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (MD&A) is intended to help the reader understand the Company, our segment operations and our present business environment. MD&A is provided as a supplement to – and should be read in conjunction with – our consolidated financial statements and the accompanying notes. All statements in the following discussion that are not statements of historical information or descriptions of current accounting policy are forward-looking statements. Please consider our forward-looking statements in light of the risks referred to in this report’s introductory cautionary note, the risks mentioned in Item 1A. "Risk Factors” of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
, and Item 1A "Risk Factors" included within Form 10-Q for the period ended March 31, 2016. This overview summarizes the MD&A, which includes the following sections:
19
•
Second
Quarter Review
—highlights from the
second
quarter of
2016
outlining some of the major events that happened during the period and how they affected our financial performance.
•
Results of Operations
—an in-depth analysis of our revenues by segment and our expenses from a consolidated perspective for the
three and six
months ended
June 30, 2016
. To the extent material to the understanding of segment profitability, we more fully describe the segment expenses per financial statement line item. Financial and statistical data is also included here. This section includes forward-looking statements regarding our view of the remainder of
2016
.
•
Liquidity and Capital Resources
—an overview of our financial position, analysis of cash flows, and relevant contractual obligations and commitments.
SECOND
QUARTER REVIEW
Our consolidated pretax income was
$420 million
during the
second
quarter of
2016
, compared to
$376 million
in the
second
quarter of
2015
. The increase of
$44 million
was mainly due to
increased
revenues of
$57 million
and lower aircraft fuel expense of
$60 million
, partially offset by an increase in non-fuel expenses of
$71 million
.
See “
Results of Operations
” below for further discussion of changes in revenues and operating expenses and our reconciliation of non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measure.
Operations Performance
During the
second
quarter, both Alaska and Horizon continued their strong on-time performance, reporting that
88.7%
and
88.2%
of their flights arrived on time, respectively. For the twelve months ended May 2016, Alaska maintained its ranking as the top carrier among the six largest U.S. airlines for on-time performance, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation.
New Markets
New routes launched and announced are as follows:
New Non-Stop Routes Launched in Q2
New Non-Stop Routes Announced (Launch Dates)
San Diego to San Jose, California
Portland, Oregon to Newark, New Jersey (11/10/16)
San Jose to Orange County, California
San Diego to Newark, New Jersey (11/21/16)
Portland to Atlanta
Portland to Sun Valley, Idaho (12/17/16)
Anchorage, Alaska to Spokane, Washington
San Diego to Steamboat Springs, Colorado (12/17/16)
San Jose, California to Newark, New Jersey (2/31/17)
Portland to Orlando, Florida (3/16/17)
Seattle to San Luis Obispo, California (4/13/17)
Los Angeles to Havana, Cuba (TBD)
(a)
(a)
Flight has been tentatively awarded by the Department of Transportation (DOT). Final DOT determination is expected during the third quarter of 2016.
Shareholder Return
During the
second
quarter of
2016
, we paid cash dividends of $34 million and we repurchased
873 thousand
shares of our common stock for
$67 million
under the $1 billion repurchase program authorized by our Board of Directors in August 2015. Since 2007, we have repurchased
59 million
shares of common stock under such programs for
$1.5
billion for an average price of
$25.90
per share. Prior to the announcement of our pending acquisition of Virgin America, we had planned to return a greater amount to shareholders in 2016 through dividends and stock repurchases than we did in 2015. In the second quarter we paused our share repurchases in advance of the pending acquisition.
Outlook
On April 4, 2016, we announced plans to acquire Virgin America. If approved by regulators, the merger with Virgin America is expected to provide us broader national reach and position us as the go-to airline for people living anywhere along the West Coast. The combined airline will provide 1,200 daily departures to our customers, leveraging our strength in the Pacific Northwest with Virgin America's strength in California. We will also gain additional access to hard-to-come-by landing slots
20
and constrained gates at destinations such as New York (JFK), San Francisco, and Los Angeles. We believe that combining our loyalty programs and networks will provide greater benefits for our West Coast customers and will expand our international partner portfolio giving our customers an even more expansive global reach. The larger platform for growth, and the synergies the combined airline is expected to generate, will allow us to create greater value for our stakeholders. We have agreed to pay $57 per share, or approximately $2.6 billion, in cash for the outstanding common stock of Virgin America.
During the second quarter both Alaska Air Group and Virgin America entered into a timing agreement with the Department of Justice (DOJ), outlining the phasing of certain steps to be taken in connection with the DOJ review of the acquisition. Pursuant to the timing agreement, Alaska Air Group and Virgin America have agreed to provide the DOJ with materials on a planned schedule and have also agreed not to complete the acquisition prior to September 30, 2016, unless the DOJ closes its investigation sooner. We currently expect the acquisition will close in the fourth quarter 2016, which would significantly impact our financial position and results.
We expect our own organic growth to continue in 2016, adding approximately 8.5% system-wide capacity in the current year. Over the past few years, we have seen competitive capacity increase significantly in our markets, especially in our hometown of Seattle. We expect to see even more competitive capacity in 2016. Current schedules indicate competitive capacity will be approximately 13% higher in the third quarter, and 12% higher in the fourth quarter
2016
.
Our current expectations for capacity and CASM excluding fuel and special items, and excluding the impact of the pending acquisition of Virgin America, are summarized below:
Forecast
Q3 2016
Change
Y-O-Y
Forecast
Full Year 2016
Change
Y-O-Y
Consolidated:
ASMs (000,000) "capacity"
11,150 - 11,200
~ 8%
43,250 - 43,350
~ 8.5%
CASM excluding fuel and special items (cents)
8.28¢ - 8.33¢
~ 3%
8.25¢ - 8.30¢
~ (0.5)%
Mainline:
ASMs (000,000) "capacity"
9,900 - 9,950
~ 7%
38,400 - 38,500
~ 7%
CASM excluding fuel and special items (cents)
7.37¢ - 7.42¢
~ 3%
7.35¢ - 7.40¢
~ (0.5)%
RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS
COMPARISON OF THREE MONTHS ENDED
JUNE 30, 2016
TO THREE MONTHS ENDED
JUNE 30, 2015
Our consolidated net income for the
second
quarter of
2016
was
$260 million
, or
$2.10
per diluted share, compared to net income of
$234 million
, or
$1.79
per diluted share, in the
second
quarter of
2015
.
•
In the
second
quarter of
2016
we recorded special items of
$14 million
(
$9 million
after tax) for merger costs associated with our pending acquisition of Virgin America.
ADJUSTED (NON-GAAP) RESULTS AND
PER-SHARE AMOUNTS
Pursuant to Regulation G, we have provided reconciliations of reported non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable financial measures reported on a GAAP basis. We believe that consideration of these non-GAAP financial measures may be important to investors for the following reasons:
•
By eliminating fuel expense and certain special items from our unit metrics, we believe that we have better visibility into the results of operations and our non-fuel cost-reduction initiatives. Our industry is highly competitive and is characterized by high fixed costs, so even a small reduction in non-fuel operating costs can result in a significant improvement in operating results. In addition, we believe that all domestic carriers are similarly impacted by changes in jet fuel costs over the long run, so it is important for management (and thus investors) to understand the impact of (and trends in) company-specific cost drivers such as labor rates and productivity, airport costs, maintenance costs, etc., which are more controllable by management.
21
•
Cost per ASM (CASM) excluding fuel and certain special items is one of the most important measures used by management and by the Air Group Board of Directors in assessing quarterly and annual cost performance.
•
Adjusted income before income tax and CASM excluding fuel, and other special items, are important metrics for the employee incentive plan that covers all Air Group employees.
•
CASM excluding fuel and certain special items is a measure commonly used by industry analysts, and we believe it is the basis by which they compare our airlines to others in the industry. The measure is also the subject of frequent questions from investors.
•
Disclosure of the individual impact of certain noted items provides investors the ability to measure and monitor performance both with and without these special items. We believe that disclosing the impact of certain items, such as mark-to-market hedging adjustments or merger costs, is important because it provides information on significant items that are not necessarily indicative of future performance. Industry analysts and investors consistently measure our performance without these items for better comparability between periods and among other airlines.
•
Although we disclose our passenger unit revenues, we do not (nor are we able to) evaluate unit revenues excluding the impact that changes in fuel costs have had on ticket prices. Fuel expense represents a large percentage of our total operating expenses. Fluctuations in fuel prices often drive changes in unit revenues in the mid-to-long term. Although we believe it is useful to evaluate non-fuel unit costs for the reasons noted above, we would caution readers of these financial statements not to place undue reliance on unit costs excluding fuel as a measure or predictor of future profitability because of the significant impact of fuel costs on our business.
Although we are presenting these non-GAAP amounts for the reasons above, investors and other readers should not necessarily conclude these amounts are non-recurring, infrequent, or unusual in nature.
Excluding the impact of mark-to-market fuel hedge adjustments and merger costs, our adjusted consolidated net income for the
second
quarter of
2016
was
$263 million
, or
$2.12
per diluted share, compared to an adjusted consolidated net income of
$230 million
, or
$1.76
per diluted share, in the
second
quarter of
2015
.
Three Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
(in millions, except per share amounts)
Dollars
Diluted EPS
Dollars
Diluted EPS
Net income and diluted EPS as reported
$
260
$
2.10
$
234
$
1.79
Mark-to-market fuel hedge adjustments, net of tax
(6
)
(0.05
)
(4
)
(0.03
)
Special items - merger costs, net of tax
9
0.07
—
—
Non-GAAP adjusted income and per-share amounts
$
263
$
2.12
$
230
$
1.76
Our operating costs per ASM are summarized below:
Three Months Ended June 30,
(in cents)
2016
2015
% Change
Consolidated:
CASM
9.73
¢
10.70
¢
(9.1
)%
Less the following components:
Aircraft fuel, including hedging gains and losses
1.82
2.62
(30.5
)%
Special items - merger costs
0.13
—
NM
CASM excluding fuel and special items
7.78
¢
8.08
¢
(3.7
)%
Mainline:
CASM
8.60
¢
9.70
¢
(11.3
)%
Less the following components:
Aircraft fuel, including hedging gains and losses
1.72
2.53
(32.0
)%
CASM excluding fuel and special items
6.88
¢
7.17
¢
(4.0
)%
22
OPERATING STATISTICS SUMMARY (unaudited)
Below are operating statistics we use to measure operating performance. We often refer to unit revenues and adjusted unit costs, which are non-GAAP measures.
Three Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
Change
Consolidated Operating Statistics:
(a)
Revenue passengers (000)
8,647
8,024
7.8%
Revenue passenger miles (RPM) (000,000) "traffic"
9,397
8,451
11.2%
Available seat miles (ASM) (000,000) "capacity"
11,062
9,949
11.2%
Load factor
84.9%
84.9%
—
Yield
13.44¢
14.56¢
(7.7)%
Passenger revenue per ASM (PRASM)
11.42¢
12.37¢
(7.7)%
Revenue per ASM (RASM)
13.51¢
14.44¢
(6.4)%
Operating expense per ASM (CASM) excluding fuel and special items
(b)
7.78¢
8.08¢
(3.7)%
Economic fuel cost per gallon
(b)
$1.53
$2.12
(27.8)%
Fuel gallons (000,000)
138
126
9.5%
ASMs per fuel gallon
80.2
79.0
1.5%
Average full-time equivalent employees (FTEs)
14,470
13,793
4.9%
Mainline Operating Statistics:
Revenue passengers (000)
6,282
5,787
8.6%
RPMs (000,000) "traffic"
8,456
7,662
10.4%
ASMs (000,000) "capacity"
9,875
8,984
9.9%
Load factor
85.6%
85.3%
0.3 pts
Yield
12.25¢
13.29¢
(7.8)%
PRASM
10.49¢
11.34¢
(7.5)%
RASM
12.61¢
13.40¢
(5.9)%
CASM excluding fuel and special items
(b)
6.88¢
7.17¢
(4.0)%
Economic fuel cost per gallon
(b)
$1.52
$2.12
(28.3)%
Fuel gallons (000,000)
118
110
7.3%
ASMs per fuel gallon
83.7
81.7
2.4%
Average FTEs
11,261
10,726
5.0%
Aircraft utilization
10.8
11.1
(2.7%)
Average aircraft stage length
1,177
1,191
(1.2%)
Operating fleet
152
140
12 a/c
Regional Operating Statistics:
(c)
Revenue passengers (000)
2,365
2,237
5.7%
RPMs (000,000) "traffic"
941
789
19.3%
ASMs (000,000) "capacity"
1,187
965
23.0%
Load factor
79.3%
81.8%
(2.5 pts)
Yield
24.17¢
26.92¢
(10.2)%
PRASM
19.16¢
21.99¢
(12.9)%
Operating fleet
69
63
6 a/c
(a)
Except for FTEs, data includes information related to third-party regional capacity purchase flying arrangements.
(b)
See reconciliation of operating expenses excluding fuel and special items, and a reconciliation of economic fuel costs in the accompanying pages.
(c)
Data presented includes information related to flights operated by Horizon and third-party carriers.
23
OPERATING REVENUES
Total operating revenues
increased
$57 million
, or
4%
, during the
second
quarter of
2016
compared to the same period in
2015
. The changes are summarized in the following table:
Three Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
% Change
Passenger
Mainline
$
1,036
$
1,019
2
%
Regional
227
212
7
%
Total passenger revenue
1,263
1,231
3
%
Freight and mail
27
30
(10
)%
Other - net
204
176
16
%
Total operating revenues
$
1,494
$
1,437
4
%
Passenger Revenue – Mainline
In the
second
quarter of
2016
, Mainline passenger revenue
increased
by
2%
due to a
9.9%
increase
in capacity, largely offset by a
decrease
of
7.5%
in PRASM compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. The
increase
in capacity was driven primarily by new routes and larger aircraft added to our fleet since the
second
quarter of
2015
. The
decrease
in PRASM was driven by a
7.8%
decline in ticket yield compared to the prior-year quarter. The
decrease
in ticket yield was primarily due to increased competitive capacity and industry fare actions in the markets we serve, as well as our own growth. Furthermore, the significant decline in fuel prices over the last year has contributed to lower ticket prices.
Passenger Revenue – Regional
Regional passenger revenue
increase
d
7%
compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
due to a
23.0%
increase
in capacity, partially offset by a
12.9%
decrease
in PRASM. The increase in capacity is due to an increase in departures, and average aircraft stage length as well as the annualization of new routes introduced over the past twelve months. The
decrease
in PRASM is due to a
10.2%
decline in ticket yield, as well as a
decrease
in load factor of
2.5 points
. The decrease in yield is due to an increase in competitive capacity in our regional markets and our own growth as we strengthen our network utility in the Pacific Northwest, as well as an increase in the average trip length of our regional flights.
Other – Net
Other - net revenue
increased
$28 million
, or
16%
, from the
second
quarter of
2015
, primarily due to increases in Mileage Plan revenue. Mileage Plan revenue increased
$26 million
, or
32%
, due to increased miles sold and higher rates paid by our affinity credit card partner beginning January 1, 2016 as a result of a contract extension.
OPERATING EXPENSES
Total operating expenses
increased
$11 million
, or
1%
, compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. We believe it is useful to summarize operating expenses as follows, which is consistent with the way expenses are reported internally and evaluated by management:
Three Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
% Change
Fuel expense
$
201
$
261
(23
)%
Non-fuel expenses
875
804
9
%
Special items - merger costs
14
—
NM
Total Operating Expenses
$
1,076
$
1,065
1
%
Significant operating expense variances from
2015
are more fully described below.
24
Wages and Benefits
Wages and benefits
increased
during the
second
quarter of
2016
by
$27 million
. The primary components of wages and benefits are shown in the following table:
Three Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
% Change
Wages
$
249
$
231
8
%
Pension - Defined benefit plans
6
7
(14
)%
Defined contribution plans
16
15
7
%
Medical and other benefits
42
35
20
%
Payroll taxes
19
17
12
%
Total wages and benefits
$
332
$
305
9
%
Wages
increased
8%
with a
4.9%
increase
in FTEs. The increase in wages is primarily attributable to increased FTEs to support the growth in our business, and an increase in the average wages per employee.
Medical and other benefits
increased
20%
compared to the same period in the prior year. The increase is primarily due to an increase in medical claims with growth in the number of employees and increasing medical costs.
Aircraft Fuel
Aircraft fuel expense includes both
raw fuel expense
(as defined below) plus the effect of mark-to-market adjustments to our fuel hedge portfolio included in our consolidated statement of operations as the value of that portfolio increases and decreases. Our aircraft fuel expense can be volatile, because it includes these gains or losses in the value of the underlying instrument as crude oil prices and refining margins increase or decrease.
Raw fuel expense
is defined as the price that we generally pay at the airport, or the “into-plane” price, including taxes and fees. Raw fuel prices are impacted by world oil prices and refining costs, which can vary by region in the U.S.
Raw fuel expense
approximates cash paid to suppliers and does not reflect the effect of our fuel hedges.
Aircraft fuel expense
decreased
$60 million
, or
23%
compared to
2015
. The elements of the change are illustrated in the following table:
Three Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
(in millions, except for per gallon amounts)
Dollars
Cost/Gal
Dollars
Cost/Gal
Raw or "into-plane" fuel cost
$
207
$
1.50
$
262
$
2.08
Losses on settled hedges
4
0.03
5
0.04
Consolidated economic fuel expense
211
1.53
267
2.12
Mark-to-market fuel hedge adjustments
(10
)
(0.07
)
(6
)
(0.05
)
GAAP fuel expense
$
201
$
1.46
$
261
$
2.07
Fuel gallons
138
126
Fuel expense was lower than in the
second
quarter of
2015
as the raw fuel price per gallon
decreased
28%
on a
10%
increase
in fuel gallons. West Coast jet fuel prices are impacted by both the price of crude oil, as well as refining margins associated with the conversion of crude oil to jet fuel. The decrease in raw fuel price per gallon during the
second
quarter of
2016
was due to
lower
crude oil prices of
21%
and a decrease in refining margins of
47%
, when compared to the prior year.
We also evaluate
economic fuel expense
, which we define as raw fuel expense adjusted for the cash we receive from, or pay to, hedge counterparties for hedges that settle during the period, and for the premium expense that we paid for those contracts. A key difference between aircraft fuel expense and economic fuel expense is the timing of gain or loss recognition on our hedge portfolio. When we refer to economic fuel expense, we include gains and losses only when they are realized for those contracts that were settled during the period based on their original contract terms. We believe this is the best measure of the effect that fuel prices are currently having on our business because it most closely approximates the net cash outflow associated with
25
purchasing fuel for our operations. Accordingly, many industry analysts evaluate our results using this measure, and it is the basis for most internal management reporting and incentive pay plans.
We recognized
losses
of
$4 million
for hedges that settled during the
second
quarter of
2016
, compared to
losses
of
$5 million
in the
second
quarter of
2015
. These amounts represent the net cash paid including the premium expense recognized for those hedges.
Aircraft Maintenance
Aircraft maintenance expense
increased
by
$13 million
, or
25%
, compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. Maintenance costs increased due to more engine maintenance events in the current quarter. Additionally, in the prior year we received vendor credits, which offset our expense, for engine maintenance that had been previously completed on the B737 fleet.
Contracted Services
Contracted services expense
increased
$9 million
, or
18%
, compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. The increase is primarily due to increased flying at stations where we use vendors to assist us when compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. Additionally, wage rates have increased in part due to higher minimum wage laws in certain locations.
Depreciation and Amortization Expense
Depreciation and amortization expense
increased
$13 million
, or
16%
, compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. The increase is primarily due to the addition of 20 owned aircraft in the fleet since June 30, 2015.
Food and Beverage Expense
Food and beverage expense
increased
$3 million
, or
11%
, compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. The increase is due to the increased number of passengers, and upgrades to our onboard menu, offering higher quality food and beverage products.
Third-party regional carrier expense
Third-party regional carrier expense, which represents payments made to SkyWest and PenAir under our CPA agreements,
increased
$7 million
, or
41%
, compared to the prior year. The increase is primarily due to more flying by SkyWest in the current quarter when compared to the prior year related to the addition of six E175 aircraft to our regional operations since June 30,
2015
.
Other Operating Expenses
Other operating expenses
decreased
$13 million
, or
14%
, compared to the
second
quarter of
2015
. The decrease is primarily due to an insurance claim reimbursement received during the second quarter of 2016.
Special Items
We recorded special items of $
14 million
related to merger costs associated with our pending acquisition of Virgin America.
Additional Segment Information
Refer to the Notes of the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements for a detailed description of each segment. Below is a summary of each segment's profitability.
Alaska Mainline
Pretax profit for Alaska Mainline was
$392 million
in the
second
quarter of
2016
compared to
$331 million
in the
second
quarter of
2015
. Mainline passenger revenue increased
$17 million
which is described above. Mainline operating expense excluding fuel increased by
$34 million
to
$679 million
in
2016
due to higher wages to support our growth, higher ramp and passenger handling associated with increased flying, higher wage rates at stations where we use vendors to assist us, higher maintenance costs and depreciation due to our growing fleet. Economic fuel cost decreased due to lower raw fuel costs, partially offset by a
7.3%
increase
in consumption.
26
Alaska Regional
Pretax profit for Alaska Regional was
$24 million
in the
second
quarter of
2016
compared to
$29 million
in the
second
quarter of
2015
. The
$15 million
increase
in Alaska Regional passenger revenue is described above. The increase in revenue and the decline in fuel costs were partially offset by higher expenses to support additional departures.
Horizon
Pretax profit for Horizon was
$7 million
in the
second
quarter of
2016
compared to
$8 million
in the
second
quarter of
2015
. CPA Revenues (
100%
of which are from Alaska and eliminated in consolidation) increased due to a higher CPA rate paid by Alaska on similar capacity as in the prior year. The
$11 million
increase in Horizon's non-fuel operating expenses was largely driven by higher wages to support the additional flying, and increased volume of engine and airframe maintenance events.
COMPARISON OF
SIX
MONTHS ENDED
JUNE 30, 2016
TO
SIX
MONTHS ENDED
JUNE 30, 2015
Our consolidated net income for the first
six
months of
2016
was
$444 million
, or
$3.56
per diluted share, compared to net income of
$383 million
, or
$2.91
per diluted share in the first
six
months of
2015
. Significant items impacting the comparability between the periods are as follows:
•
In the
second
quarter of
2016
we recorded special items of
$14 million
(
$9 million
after tax) related to merger costs associated with our pending acquisition of Virgin America.
ADJUSTED (NON-GAAP) RESULTS AND PER-SHARE AMOUNTS
Excluding the impact of mark-to-market fuel hedge adjustments and special items, our adjusted consolidated net income for the first
six
months of
2016
was
$445 million
, or
$3.57
per diluted share, compared to an adjusted consolidated net income of
$379 million
, or
$2.88
per share, in the first
six
months of
2015
.
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
(in millions, except per share amounts)
Dollars
Diluted EPS
Dollars
Diluted EPS
Net income and diluted EPS as reported
$
444
$
3.56
$
383
$
2.91
Mark-to-market fuel hedge adjustments, net of tax
(8
)
(0.06
)
(4
)
(0.03
)
Special items - merger costs, net of tax
9
0.07
—
—
Non-GAAP adjusted income and per-share amounts
$
445
$
3.57
$
379
$
2.88
Our operating costs per ASM are summarized below:
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in cents)
2016
2015
% Change
Consolidated:
CASM
9.91
¢
10.91
¢
(9.2
)
Less the following components:
Aircraft fuel, including hedging gains and losses
1.71
2.58
(33.7
)
Special items - merger costs
0.06
—
NM
CASM excluding fuel and special items
8.14
¢
8.33
¢
(2.3
)
Mainline:
CASM
8.80
¢
9.89
¢
(11.0
)
Less the following components:
Aircraft fuel, including hedging gains and losses
1.62
2.48
(34.7
)
CASM excluding fuel and special items
7.18
¢
7.41
¢
(3.1
)
27
OPERATING STATISTICS SUMMARY (unaudited)
Below are operating statistics we use to measure operating performance. We often refer to unit revenues and adjusted unit costs, which are non-GAAP measures.
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
Change
Consolidated Operating Statistics:
(a)
Revenue passengers (000)
16,482
15,340
7.4%
Revenue passenger miles (RPM) (000,000) "traffic"
17,968
16,173
11.1%
Available seat miles (ASM) (000,000) "capacity"
21,515
19,206
12.0%
Load factor
83.5%
84.2%
(0.7) pts
Yield
13.34¢
14.33¢
(6.9)%
Passenger revenue per ASM (PRASM)
11.14¢
12.07¢
(7.7)%
Revenue per ASM (RASM)
13.21¢
14.09¢
(6.2)%
Operating expense per ASM (CASM) excluding fuel and special items
(b)
8.14¢
8.33¢
(2.3)%
Economic fuel cost per gallon
(b)
$1.41
$2.05
(31.2)%
Fuel gallons (000,000)
270
245
10.2%
ASMs per fuel gallon
79.7
78.4
1.7%
Average full-time equivalent employees (FTEs)
14,414
13,534
6.5%
Mainline Operating Statistics:
Revenue passengers (000)
11,925
11,022
8.2%
RPMs (000,000) "traffic"
16,172
14,657
10.3%
ASMs (000,000) "capacity"
19,229
17,330
11.0%
Load factor
84.1%
84.6%
(0.5) pts
Yield
12.14¢
13.10¢
(7.3)%
PRASM
10.21¢
11.08¢
(7.9)%
RASM
12.31¢
13.09¢
(6.0)%
CASM excluding fuel and special items
(b)
7.18¢
7.41¢
(3.1)%
Economic fuel cost per gallon
(b)
$1.40
$2.05
(31.7)%
Fuel gallons (000,000)
231
213
8.5%
ASMs per fuel gallon
83.2
81.4
2.2%
Average FTEs
11,192
10,553
6.1%
Aircraft utilization
10.7
10.8
(0.9%)
Average aircraft stage length
1,195
1,195
—%
Operating fleet
152
140
12 a/c
Regional Operating Statistics:
(c)
Revenue passengers (000)
4,558
4,318
5.6%
RPMs (000,000) "traffic"
1,796
1,516
18.5%
ASMs (000,000) "capacity"
2,287
1,876
21.9%
Load factor
78.5%
80.8%
(2.3 pts)
Yield
24.13¢
26.28¢
(8.2)%
PRASM
18.95¢
21.25¢
(10.8)%
Operating fleet
69
63
6 a/c
(a)
Except for FTEs, data includes information related to third-party regional capacity purchase flying arrangements.
(b)
See reconciliation of operating expenses excluding fuel and special items, and a reconciliation of economic fuel costs in the accompanying pages.
(c)
Data presented includes information related to flights operated by Horizon and third-party carriers.
28
OPERATING REVENUES
Total operating revenues
increased
$135 million
, or
5%
, during the first
six
months of
2016
compared to the same period in
2015
. The changes are summarized in the following table:
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
% Change
Passenger
Mainline
$
1,963
$
1,920
2
Regional
433
398
9
Total passenger revenue
2,396
2,318
3
Freight and mail
51
53
(4
)
Other - net
394
335
18
Total operating revenues
$
2,841
$
2,706
5
Passenger Revenue – Mainline
Mainline passenger revenue for the first
six
months of
2016
increased
by
2%
on an
11%
increase
in capacity and a
7.9%
decrease
in PRASM compared to the same period in
2015
. The
increase
in capacity is driven by routes added in the last twelve months. The
decrease
in PRASM was driven by a
7.3%
decrease
in ticket yield as well as a
0.5-point
decrease
in load factor compared to the prior-year period. Yields decreased due to increased competitive capacity and industry fare actions in the markets we serve, as well as our own growth. The decline in fuel prices has contributed to lower ticket prices, while the decline in load factor was a result of increased capacity.
Passenger Revenue – Regional
Regional passenger revenue
increased
by
$35 million
, or
9%
, compared to the first
six
months of
2015
, due to a
21.9%
increase
in capacity, partially offset by a
10.8%
decrease
in PRASM. The
decrease
in PRASM was due to a decline in load factor of
2.3 points
and a
decrease
in ticket yield of
8.2%
. The decline in yield is due to an increase in competitive capacity in our regional markets and our own growth as we strengthen our network utility in the Pacific Northwest, and an increase in average trip length.
Other – Net
Other - net revenue
increased
$59 million
, or
18%
, from the first
six
months of
2015
. Mileage Plan revenue increased
$52 million
, due to an increase in miles sold, and higher rates paid by our affinity credit card partner beginning January 1, 2016 as a result of a contract extension.
OPERATING EXPENSES
Total operating expenses
increased
$37 million
, or
2%
, compared to the first
six
months of
2015
, mostly as a result of higher non-fuel costs. We believe it is useful to summarize operating expenses as follows, which is consistent with the way expenses are reported internally and evaluated by management:
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
% Change
Fuel expense
$
368
$
496
(26
)
Non-fuel expenses
1,751
1,600
9
Special items - merger costs
14
—
NM
Total Operating Expenses
$
2,133
$
2,096
2
Significant operating expense variances from
2015
are more fully described below.
29
Wages and Benefits
Wages and benefits
increased
during the first
six
months of
2016
by
$57 million
, or
9%
, compared to
2015
. The primary components of wages and benefits are shown in the following table:
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in millions)
2016
2015
% Change
Wages
$
499
$
461
8
Pension - Defined benefit plans
13
14
(7
)
Defined contribution plans
33
30
10
Medical and other benefits
85
73
16
Payroll taxes
38
33
15
Total wages and benefits
$
668
$
611
9
Wages
increased
8%
on a
6.5%
increase
in FTEs. The increase in wages is largely driven by the increased number of FTEs to support the growth in our business.
Defined contribution plans increased
10%
, due to the increased number of FTEs and higher employee participation rates when compared to the prior year, and increased contributions throughout all labor groups.
Medical and other benefits increased
16%
compared to the same period in the prior year. The increase is due to an increase in medical claims with the growth in the number of employees and increasing medical costs.
We expect wages and benefits to increase for the full year due to continuing growth in FTEs to support additional aircraft in our fleet, and higher medical and other benefits.
Aircraft Fuel
Aircraft fuel expense
decreased
$128 million
, compared to
2015
. The elements of the change are illustrated in the following table:
Six Months Ended June 30,
2016
2015
(in millions, except for per gallon amounts)
Dollars
Cost/Gallon
Dollars
Cost/Gallon
Raw or "into-plane" fuel cost
$
372
$
1.38
$
492
$
2.01
(Gains) losses on settled hedges
8
0.03
10
0.04
Consolidated economic fuel expense
380
1.41
502
2.05
Mark-to-market fuel hedge adjustments
(12
)
(0.04
)
(6
)
(0.02
)
GAAP fuel expense
$
368
$
1.37
$
496
$
2.03
Fuel gallons
270
245
The raw fuel price per gallon
decreased
31.3%
as a result of lower West Coast jet fuel prices. The decrease in raw fuel price per gallon during the first
six
months of
2016
was due to decreases in refining margins of
46%
, and decreases in crude oil prices of
25%
.
Losses recognized for hedges that settled during the first six months of the year were
$8 million
in
2016
, compared to
$10 million
in
2015
. These amounts represent the cash paid for premium expense, offset by cash received from those hedges. The decrease in losses on settled hedges is primarily due to our increasing use of "out of the money" call options as well as purchasing shorter-dated options, both of which reduce the premium cost we pay.
We currently expect our economic fuel price per gallon to be lower in the
third
quarter of
2016
compared to the
third
quarter of
2015
due to our current estimate of lower crude prices, lower refining margins, and a decrease in hedge premium expense. For the full year, we expect our economic fuel price per gallon to be lower than the prior year primarily due to lower refining margins.
30
Aircraft Maintenance
Aircraft maintenance
increased
by
$18 million
, or
16%
, compared to the prior-year period due to more engine maintenance events in the current year when compared to the prior year. Additionally, in the prior year we received vendor credits, which offset our expense, for engine maintenance that had been previously completed on the B737 fleet.
For the full year, we expect aircraft maintenance to be approximately 3-4% higher than 2015 due to additional aircraft in our fleet.
Contracted Services
Contracted services expense
increased
$18 million
, or
18%
, compared to the first
six
months of
2015
. The increase is primarily due to increased flying at stations where we use vendors to assist us when compared to the prior year. Additionally, wage rates have increased in part due to higher minimum wage laws in certain locations.
For the full year, we expect contracted services to be higher than 2015, due to additional flying to more locations where we use vendors to assist us, higher minimum wage rates, and an increase in passenger volume.
Depreciation and Amortization Expense
Depreciation and amortization expense
increased
$25 million
, or
16%
, compared to the first
six
months of
2015
. The increase is primarily due to the addition of 20 owned aircraft in the fleet since June 30, 2015.
Special Items
We recorded special items of $
14 million
related to merger costs associated with our pending acquisition of Virgin America.
Additional Segment Information
Refer to the Notes of the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements for a detailed description of each segment. Below is a summary of each segment's profitability.
Alaska Mainline
Pretax profit for Alaska Mainline was
$670 million
in the first
six
months of
2016
, compared to
$558 million
in the same period in
2015
. The
$43 million
increase in Mainline passenger revenue is described above. Mainline operating expense excluding fuel increased by
$96 million
to approximately
$1.4 billion
in
2016
due to higher wages to support our network growth, higher ramp and passenger handling due to increased flying and higher wage rates at stations where we use vendors to assist us, higher depreciation related to our fleet growth. Economic fuel cost decreased due to lower raw fuel costs, partially offset by an
8.5%
increase
in consumption.
Alaska Regional
Pretax profit for Alaska Regional was
$37 million
in the first
six
months of
2016
, compared to
$37 million
the
second
quarter of
2015
. The increased Regional revenue and the decline in fuel costs were offset by higher expenses to support the growth in our regional network.
Horizon
Pretax profit for Horizon was
$5 million
in the first
six
months of
2016
, compared to pretax profit of
$14 million
in the same period in
2015
. CPA Revenues (
100%
of which are from Alaska and eliminated in consolidation) increased due to additional capacity added in the last 12 months. The
$25 million
increase in Horizon's non-fuel operating expenses was largely driven by an increased volume of engine overhaul and heavy airframe work, and signing bonuses and overhead restructuring costs.
31
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
Our primary sources of liquidity are:
•
Our existing cash and marketable securities balance of
$1.6 billion
, and our expected cash from operations;
•
Our
101
unencumbered aircraft in our operating fleet that could be financed, if necessary;
•
Our combined
$252 million
bank line-of-credit facilities, with no outstanding borrowings.
During the first
six
months of
2016
, we took free and clear delivery of 12 B737-900ER aircraft. We made debt payments totaling
$57 million
. In addition, we continued to return capital to our shareholders by repurchasing
$193 million
of our common stock in
2016
, and paid dividends totaling
$68 million
. Because of our strong balance sheet and financial performance, we are one of only three airlines in the U.S. with an investment grade credit rating.
We intend to fund the pending $2.6 billion acquisition of Virgin America with cash on hand and secured debt financing using the majority of our unencumbered aircraft. We currently have business terms, in principle, for all of the financing needed to fund the acquisition.
In our cash and marketable securities portfolio, we invest only in securities that meet our overall investment policy of maintaining and securing investment principal. Our investment portfolio is managed by reputable firms that adhere to our investment policy that sets forth certain objectives, approved and prohibited investments, and duration and credit quality guidelines. Our policy and the portfolio managers are continually reviewed to ensure that the investments align with our strategy.
The table below presents the major indicators of financial condition and liquidity:
(in millions, except per share and debt-to-capital amounts)
June 30, 2016
December 31, 2015
Change
Cash and marketable securities
$
1,607
$
1,328
21.0
%
Cash, marketable securities, and unused lines of credit as a percentage of trailing twelve months revenue
32
%
28
%
4
pts
Long-term debt, net of current portion
$
509
$
569
(10.5
)
%
Shareholders’ equity
$
2,627
$
2,411
9.0
%
Long-term debt-to-capital including net present value of aircraft operating lease payments
(a)
25%:75%
27%:73%
(2
)
pts
(a)
Calculated using the present value of remaining aircraft lease payments for aircraft in our operating fleet as of the end of the period.
The following discussion summarizes the primary drivers of the increase in our cash and marketable securities balance and our expectation of future cash requirements.
ANALYSIS OF OUR CASH FLOWS
Cash Provided by Operating Activities
For the first
six
months of
2016
, net cash provided by operating activities was
$899 million
, compared to
$889 million
during the same period in
2015
. Improved operating results, primarily driven from lower jet fuel costs and higher revenues, contributed to the
$10 million
increase in operating cash flow.
We typically generate positive cash flows from operations and expect to use that cash flow to buy aircraft and capital equipment, make normal debt payments, and to return capital to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends. We have recently paused our share repurchase program as we are building cash for the pending Virgin America acquisition.
32
Cash Used in Investing Activities
Cash used in investing activities was
$590 million
during the first
six
months of
2016
, compared to
$594 million
during the same period of
2015
. Our capital expenditures were
$340 million
in the first
six
months of
2016
, a decrease of
$219 million
compared to the the same period in 2015. The decrease in cash used for capital expenditures in the current year is due to fewer pre-delivery deposits on aircraft made when compared to the prior year.
The table below reflects our full-year expectation for capital expenditures and additional expenditures if options are exercised. Options will be exercised only if we believe return on invested capital targets can be met. The table below excludes any associated capitalized interest.
(in millions)
2016
2017
2018
2019
Aircraft and aircraft purchase deposits - firm
$
500
$
815
$
665
$
585
Other flight equipment
70
110
65
60
Other property and equipment
125
115
110
95
Total property and equipment additions
$
695
$
1,040
$
840
$
740
Option aircraft and aircraft deposits, if exercised
(a)
$
70
$
135
$
270
$
600
(a)
Alaska has options to acquire
46
B737 aircraft with deliveries from
2018
through
2024
. Horizon has options for
30
E175 aircraft with deliveries from
2019
to
2021
. Horizon also has options to acquire
five
Q400 aircraft with deliveries from
2018
through
2019
which we currently do not expect to exercise and related deposits are excluded from the table above.
Cash Used by Financing Activities
Net cash used by financing activities was
$301 million
during the first
six
months of
2016
compared to
$357 million
during the same period in
2015
. During the first
six
months of
2016
we made debt payments of
$57 million
, stock repurchases of
$193 million
, and dividend payments totaling
$68 million
.
Bank Line-of-Credit Facilities
We have two
$100 million
credit facilities and a $52 million credit facility. Information about these facilities can be found in Note 6 in the Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 1 of this Form 10-Q. We have no immediate plans to borrow using any of these facilities.
CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS AND COMMITMENTS
Aircraft Purchase Commitments
As of
June 30, 2016
, we have firm orders to purchase
56
737 aircraft and
33
E175 aircraft. As of June 30, 2016, we also have commitments for 2 Q400 aircraft that we currently do not intend to take delivery of. We also have options to acquire
46
B737 aircraft with deliveries from
2018
through
2024
,
30
E175 aircraft with deliveries from
2017
to
2021
and
five
Q400 aircraft with deliveries from
2018
through
2019
. In addition, as of
June 30, 2016
, we have options in future periods to add regional capacity by having SkyWest operate up to
8
more E175 aircraft.
The following table summarizes expected fleet activity by year:
Actual Fleet
Expected Fleet Activity
(a)
Aircraft
Dec 31, 2015
2016 Changes
Dec 31, 2016
2017-2018 Changes
Dec 31, 2018
737 Freighters & Combis
(b)
6
—
6
(3
)
3
737 Passenger Aircraft
(b)
141
6
147
9
156
Total Mainline Fleet
147
6
153
6
159
Q400
(d)
52
—
52
(15
)
37
E175
(c)
5
10
15
28
43
CRJ700
(c)
8
(8
)
—
—
—
Total Regional Fleet
65
2
67
13
80
Total
212
8
220
19
239
(a)
The expected fleet counts at December 31, 2016 and beyond are subject to change.
33
(b)
2016 change in 737 Passenger Aircraft reflects delivery of 19 737-900 aircraft, the retirement of 10 737-400 aircraft and the removal from service of three 737-700 aircraft. The three 737-700 aircraft are being converted to freighters and will return to service in 2017.
(c)
Aircraft are operated under capacity purchase agreements with Horizon or other regional airlines.
(d)
Excludes deliveries of two Q400 aircraft that are currently contracted. At this time we do not expect to take delivery of those aircraft.
For future firm orders, and if we exercise our options for additional deliveries, we may finance the aircraft through internally generated cash, long-term debt, or lease arrangements.
Fuel Hedge Positions
All of our current oil positions are call options, which are designed to effectively cap the cost of the crude oil component of our jet fuel purchases. With call options, we benefit from a decline in crude oil prices, as there is no cash outlay other than the premiums we pay to enter into the contracts. Our crude oil positions are as follows:
Approximate % of Expected Fuel Requirements
Weighted-Average Crude Oil Price per Barrel
Average Premium Cost per Barrel
Third Quarter 2016
50
%
$62
$3
Fourth Quarter 2016
50
%
$61
$3
Remainder 2016
50
%
$62
$3
First Quarter 2017
40
%
$58
$3
Second Quarter 2017
30
%
$58
$3
Third Quarter 2017
20
%
$59
$4
Fourth Quarter 2017
10
%
$63
$4
Full Year 2017
25
%
$59
$3
Contractual Obligations
The following table provides a summary of our principal payments under current and long-term debt obligations, operating lease commitments, aircraft purchase commitments and other obligations as of
June 30, 2016
. Such commitments do not reflect the pending Virgin America merger.
(in millions)
Remainder of 2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
Beyond 2020
Total
Current and long-term debt obligations
$
58
$
121
$
151
$
114
$
116
$
69
$
629
Operating lease commitments
(a)
86
189
132
123
113
542
1,185
Aircraft purchase commitments
(d)
305
931
725
648
337
400
3,346
Interest obligations
(b)
15
26
20
12
7
4
84
Capacity Purchase Agreements
(c)
34
78
81
86
92
745
1,116
Total
$
498
$
1,345
$
1,109
$
983
$
665
$
1,760
$
6,360
(a)
Operating lease commitments generally include aircraft operating leases (including those under capacity purchase agreements), airport property and hangar leases, office space, and other equipment leases.
(b)
For variable-rate debt, future obligations are shown above using interest rates in effect as of
June 30, 2016
.
(c)
Includes minimum obligations associated with third-party CPA provider SkyWest. Refer to the "Commitments" note in the condensed consolidated financial statements for further information.
(d)
Includes payments for two Q400 aircraft deliveries in 2018 that are currently contracted. However, at this time we do not expect to take delivery of those aircraft.
Credit Card Agreements
We have agreements with a number of credit card companies to process the sale of tickets and other services. Under these agreements, there are material adverse change clauses that, if triggered, could result in the credit card companies holding back a reserve from our credit card receivables. Under one such agreement, we could be required to maintain a reserve if our credit rating is downgraded to, or below, a rating specified by the agreement or our cash and marketable securities balance falls below
$500 million
. Under another such agreement, we could be required to maintain a reserve if our cash and marketable securities balance falls below
$500 million
. We are not currently required to maintain any reserve under these agreements, but if we were, our financial position and liquidity could be materially harmed.
34
Deferred Income Taxes
For federal income tax purposes, the majority of our assets are fully depreciated over a seven-year life using an accelerated depreciation method or bonus depreciation, if available. For financial reporting purposes, the majority of our assets are depreciated over 15 to 20 years to an estimated salvage value using the straight-line basis. This difference, along with other deferred liabilities and offset by deferred assets, have created a significant deferred tax liability. At some point in the future the depreciation basis will reverse, potentially resulting in an increase in income taxes paid.
Taxable income and cash taxes payable in the short term are impacted by many items, including the amount of book income generated (which can be volatile depending on revenue and fuel prices), availability of "bonus depreciation", and other legislative changes that are out of our control. We believe that we have the liquidity to make our future tax payments.
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
There have been no material changes to our critical accounting estimates for the
six
months ended
June 30, 2016
. For information on our critical accounting estimates, see Item 7. "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
.
35
Glossary of Terms
Aircraft Utilization
- block hours per day; this represents the average number of hours our aircraft are flying
Aircraft Stage Length
- represents the average miles flown per aircraft departure
ASMs
- available seat miles, or “capacity”; represents total seats available across the fleet multiplied by the number of miles flown
CASM
- operating costs per ASM, or "unit cost"; represents all operating expenses including fuel and special items
CASMex
- operating costs excluding fuel and special items per ASM; this metric is used to help track progress toward reduction of non-fuel operating costs since fuel is largely out of our control
Debt-to-capitalization ratio
- represents adjusted debt (long-term debt plus the present value of future operating lease payments) divided by total equity plus adjusted debt
Economic Fuel
- best estimate of the cash cost of fuel, net of the impact of our fuel-hedging program
Free Cash Flow
-
total operating cash flow generated less cash paid for capital expenditures (shown as Total property and equipment additions on the statement of cash flows)
Load Factor
- RPMs as a percentage of ASMs; represents the number of available seats that were filled with paying passengers
Mainline
- represents flying Boeing 737 jets and all associated revenues and costs
PRASM
- passenger revenue per ASM; commonly called “passenger unit revenue”
Productivity
- number of revenue passengers per full-time equivalent employee
RASM
- operating revenue per ASMs, or "unit revenue"; operating revenue includes all passenger revenue, freight & mail, Mileage Plan, and other ancillary revenue; represents the average total revenue for flying one seat one mile
Regional
- represents capacity purchased by Alaska from Horizon, SkyWest, and PenAir. In this segment, Alaska Regional records actual on-board passenger revenue, less costs such as fuel, distribution costs, and payments made to Horizon, SkyWest and PenAir under the respective capacity purchased arrangement (CPAs). Additionally, Alaska Regional includes an allocation of corporate overhead such as IT, finance, other administrative costs incurred by Alaska and on behalf of Horizon
RPMs
- revenue passenger miles, or "traffic"; represents the number of seats that were filled with paying passengers; one passenger traveling one mile is one RPM
Yield
- passenger revenue per RPM; represents the average revenue for flying one passenger one mile
ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURE ABOUT MARKET RISK
There have been no material changes in market risk from the information provided in Item 7A. “Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
.
ITEM 4. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
As of
June 30, 2016
, an evaluation was performed under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including our chief executive officer and chief financial officer (collectively, our “certifying officers”), of the effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures. These disclosure controls and procedures are designed to
36
ensure that the information required to be disclosed by us in our periodic reports filed with or submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified by the SEC's rules and forms, and includes, without limitation, controls and procedures designed to ensure that such information is accumulated and communicated to our management, including our certifying officers, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. Our certifying officers concluded, based on their evaluation, that disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of
June 30, 2016
.
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting
We made no changes in our internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended
June 30, 2016
, that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
Our internal control over financial reporting is based on the 2013 framework in Internal Control – Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (the COSO Framework).
37
PART II
ITEM 1. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
We are a party to routine litigation matters incidental to our business. Management believes the ultimate disposition of these matters is not likely to materially affect our financial position or results of operations. This forward-looking statement is based on management’s current understanding of the relevant law and facts, and it is subject to various contingencies, including the potential costs and risks associated with litigation and the actions of judges and juries.
ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS
There have been no material changes to the risk factors affecting our business, financial condition or future results from those set forth in Item 1A."Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
and in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the period ended March 31, 2016. However you should carefully consider the factors discussed in such section of our Annual Report on Form 10-K and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, which could materially affect our business, financial condition or future results. Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to us or that we currently deem to be immaterial also may materially adversely affect our business, financial condition and/or operating results.
ITEM 2. UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS
This table provides certain information with respect to our purchases of shares of our common stock during the
second
quarter of
2016
.
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
Average Price
Paid per Share
Maximum remaining
dollar value of shares
that can be purchased
under the plan (in millions)
April 1, 2016 - April 30, 2016
682,273
$
78.33
May 1, 2016 - May 6, 2016
191,123
69.61
Total
873,396
$
76.43
$
687
The shares were purchased pursuant to a $1 billion repurchase plan authorized by the Board of Directors in August 2015.
ITEM 3. DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES
None
ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES
None
ITEM 5. OTHER INFORMATION
None
38
ITEM 6. EXHIBITS
The following documents are filed as part of this report:
1.
Exhibits:
See Exhibit Index.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
ALASKA AIR GROUP, INC.
/s/ CHRISTOPHER M. BERRY
Christopher M. Berry
Managing Director, Accounting and Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer)
August 2, 2016
39
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit
Number
Exhibit
Description
Form
Date of First Filing
Exhibit Number
2.1
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of April 1, 2016, by and among Virgin America Inc., Alaska Air Group, Inc. and Alpine Acquisition Corp.
8-K
April 4, 2016
2.1
10.1†
Form of Nonqualified Stock Option Agreement
10-Q
10.2†
Form of Incentive Stock Option Agreement
10-Q
10.3†
Form of Performance Stock Unit Award Agreement
10-Q
10.4†
Form of Stock Unit Award Agreement
10-Q
10.5
Alaska Air Group, Inc. 2016 Performance Incentive Plan
8-K
May 18, 2016
10.1
10.6#
Purchase Agreement, dated April 11, 2016, between Embraer S.A. and Horizon Air Industries, Inc.
10-Q
May 9, 2016
10.1
31.1†
Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
10-Q
31.2†
Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
10-Q
32.1†
Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
10-Q
32.2†
Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
10-Q
101.INS†
XBRL Instance Document
101.SCH†
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document
101.CAL†
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.DEF†
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document
101.LAB†
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PRE†
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
†
Filed herewith
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Pursuant to 17 CFR 240.24b-2, confidential information has been omitted and filed separately with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to a Confidential Treatment Application filed with the Commission.
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