Southwest, the “legacy LCC,” part 2: Bloated labor expense, difficult fleet strategy result in uncompetitive cost structure

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By Judson Rollins

Introduction

May 20, 2024, © Leeham News: Southwest Airlines was founded on the principles of high employee productivity and low labor costs. But 53 years after beginning operations, its labor cost as a percentage of expenses — and per seat-mile — is now the highest among US airlines.

Boeing 737 MAXes parked after the 2019 MAX grounding. Source: Getty Images via AFP.

LNA studied Southwest’s and its US competitors’ 2023 annual reports to comprehensively understand their relative profitability. The resulting picture is less than flattering to the Dallas-based carrier. Southwest is increasingly a “legacy LCC,” with LCC-like unit revenue but a legacy cost structure.

Summary
  • Labor costs are dramatically worse than legacy or LCC competitors.
  • Fleet and route strategy are crimped by overreliance on the Boeing 737.
  • Southwest’s insular management team and culture may be its greatest obstacle to business model innovation and continued profitability.

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Bjorn’s Corner: New engine development. Part 8. Open Rotor technology

By Bjorn Fehrm

May 17, 2024, ©. Leeham News: We do an article series about engine development. The aim is to understand why engine development now has longer timelines than airframe development and carries larger risks of product maturity problems.

To understand why engine development has become a challenging task, we need to understand engine fundamentals and the technologies used for these fundamentals.

In the last Corner, we looked at why Open-Rotor engines are more efficient. Their propulsive efficiency can be considerably higher than that of a turbofan. We will explore this further this week.

Figure 1. A counterrotating Open Rotor design that SAFRAN ground tested in 2019. Source: SAFRAN.

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Boeing’s safety, labor battles heat up while CEO will walk with $34m payout

By Scott Hamilton

May 16, 2024, © Leeham News: Even as Boeing is under fire for safety issues, the company’s battles heat up.

  • Boeing remains at an impasse with its engineers and technicians union over creating a new safety program. The company has doubled down, the union says. SPEEA has turned to lawyers for legal advice.
  • The US Department of Justice on Tuesday notified Boeing that it concluded the company failed to live up to terms of a 2021 Deferred Prosecution Agreement (DPA) intended to put to rest all criminal liabilities stemming from the 2018-19 737 MAX crashes that killed 346 people. DOJ may go ahead with criminal prosecutions now.
  • The firefighters union was locked out by Boeing over contract negotiations, bringing in replacement workers. The union says Boeing’s actions threaten safety at its plants. SPEEA and its powerful touch labor union, the IAM 751, are picketing with the firefighters in support.
  • IAM 751 apparently is using the firefighters’ strike as a training ground in anticipation of its own possible strike in September when its current contract expires.

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A350-1000 or 777-8? Part 2

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By Bjorn Fehrm

May 16, 2024, © Leeham News: We are doing an article series comparing the capabilities of the Airbus A350-1000 and the Boeing 777X. We have looked at the A350-1000 versus the 777-9 and started comparing the history and capabilities of the 777-8 versus the A350-1000 last week.

Now, we use our Aircraft Performance and Cost Model (APCM) to fly the aircraft on a typical route and compare their performance.

Summary:
  • The A350-1000 and the latest 777-8 definition is a closer payload-range match than the A350-1000 and 777-9.
  • Passenger and cargo capabilities are similar. The economic comparison will be determined by maintenance costs for the engines.

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Southwest, the “legacy LCC,” part 1: Not keeping up with industry standards crimps unit revenue

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By Judson Rollins

Introduction 

May 13, 2024, © Leeham News: Southwest Airlines, previously a longtime darling of investors and leisure passengers alike, struggles to find its footing now that the post-covid US domestic market is returning to normal.

“Bags fly free” is more headache than help for Southwest as it tries to grow unit revenue. Source: Forbes.

The airline eked out a 0.8% operating margin in 2023 and fell to -6.2% in the first quarter of 2024. Investors have lost faith in the company’s ability to return to its previously strong margins.

Southwest “is now a ‘show-me’ [investment],” airline analyst Helane Becker of Cowen recently told investors. “We expect shares to trade in a narrow range until they can return to sustainable profitability and at least high single-digit operating margins.”

After a deep dive into the airline’s cost and revenue performance, LNA believes the company is in a strategic quandary with few ways to offset rapidly rising labor, maintenance, and fuel costs. In short, Southwest is increasingly a “legacy LCC,” with LCC-like unit revenue but a legacy cost structure.

Summary
  • The airline struggles to achieve innovations widely implemented elsewhere.
  • Unit revenue is comparable to low-cost competitors, but a leisure-oriented network, product, and passenger experience leave little opportunity to increase it.
  • Underinvestment in IT and onboard product reduces Southwest’s reliability and alienates much-needed high-yield passengers.

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Bjorn’s Corner: New engine development. Part 7. Open Rotor Propulsive Efficiency

By Bjorn Fehrm

May 10, 2024, ©. Leeham News: We do an article series about engine development. The aim is to understand why engine development now has longer timelines than airframe development and carries larger risks of product maturity problems.

To understand why engine development has become a challenging task, we need to understand engine fundamentals and the technologies used for these fundamentals.

In the last Corner we started a discussion around Open Rotor engines after looking at geared versus direct-drive Turbofans. We now look deeper at the Open Rotor Propulsive Efficiency.

Figure 1. The CFM RISE Open Fan engine. Source: CFM.

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Airbus’ A350-1000 or Boeing’s 777-8? Part 1

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By Bjorn Fehrm

May 9, 2024, © Leeham News: We are doing an article series comparing the capabilities of the Airbus A350-1000 and the Boeing 777X series. We started with the 777-9, the larger model. Now, we continue with the shorter 777-8, an aircraft closer in size to the A350-1000.

The 777-8 was originally launched in a shorter version together with the 777-9. Then, it went very quiet around the 777-8, with some analysts speculating that the passenger version would not be done. The 777X freighter, the 777-8F, was launched in January 2022. It became a bit longer than the 777-8. This now forms the final definition of the 777-8.

Summary:

  • The comparison of the A350-1000 and the 777-8 is comparing the longer-narrower versus the shorter-wider.
  • Which is the best? We use Leeham’s Aircraft Performance and Cost Model (APCM) to find out.

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Embraer: Improved results, but no plan for new narrowbody

By Leeham News Team

May 7, 2024, ©. Leeham News: Embraer presented its 1Q2024 results today, showing revenues for the period up 25% and deliveries up 67% year-on-year.

Notably, however, the Brazilian planemaker dampened speculation of a push to launch a new narrowbody to compete with the A320/B737.

Embraer’s firm order backlog now stands at $21.1 billion, its highest point over the past seven years.

That was helped by the firm order from American Airlines for 90 E175 jets, plus purchase rights for 43 more.

Francisco Gomes Neto, Embraer’s CEO, highlighted during a call on Tuesday the company’s campaigns for more than 200 aircraft within the commercial division – including both the E1 and E2 family.

For 2024, Embraer is still expecting to deliver between 72 and 80 commercial aircraft, compared to 64 in 2023. Read more

Shanahan: Spirit AeroSystems and Airbus need to have “family meeting”

By the Leeham News Team

May 7, 2024, © Leeham News: For a company actively negotiating its own dismemberment, Spirit AeroSystems managed to record first quarter losses even worse than Wall Street expected. The company recorded $617M in losses and burned through $444M in cash during the first three months of the year due to the ongoing Boeing 737 MAX crisis and unfavorable prices on its Airbus A530 and A220 work.

“The death throes of Spirit are hard to watch, as these 1Q numbers are pretty horrendous,” Rob Stallard, Vertical Research aerospace analyst, wrote in a research note after the company released its earnings report.

It recorded $495M in net forward losses, largely from the Airbus A350 ($280M) and A220 ($167M) programs. Read more

Southwest could solve its MAX 7 woes … by buying Breeze?

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By Judson Rollins

Introduction 

May 6, 2024, © Leeham News: Southwest Airlines, still awaiting the certification and delivery of the Boeing 737 MAX 7 as a replacement for its aging 737-700s, might have an unorthodox alternative: acquire startup Breeze Airways for its Airbus A220 fleet – and, more importantly, its order book.

Source: Orlando International Airport via Simple Flying.

Launched in 2021 by serial airline entrepreneur David Neeleman, Breeze operates 23 A220-300s, 10 Embraer E190s, and six E195s to 47 airports across the US. It focuses on connecting larger airports to smaller cities, including a handful of transcontinental routes.

Ironically, the Utah-based airline achieved its first-ever monthly operating profit in March. It recently announced plans to operate the A220 exclusively by the end of this year.

According to a January update from database provider Cirium, Breeze has between 11 and 13 A220s scheduled for delivery each year through 2028. No options are listed.

Market intelligence says Airbus Commercial Aircraft CEO Christian Scherer visited with Southwest executives in Dallas and Breeze leadership near Salt Lake City in mid-April. This was well after Breeze’s February order for 10 additional A220s.

Summary
  • To deliver or not to deliver the MAX 7?
  • Southwest’s aging 737-700 fleet has few replacement options
  • How a Breeze acquisition might play out
  • Azorra Aviation is likely a key partner in helping Southwest get A220s

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