Chart Of The Day: After Poor Q1, Southwest Airlines Heading For Hard Landing

 | Apr 29, 2020 10:43

For years, Southwest Airlines (NYSE:LUV) was lauded as one of the most profitable airlines in the industry. But yesterday, its Q1 2020 earnings release indicated the US's largest domestic carrier had suffered its first operating loss since 2009, after COVID-19 grounded its fleet.

However, plans for augmenting revenue, detailed during the conference call—to restart operations as well as the company raising $4 billion by selling shares and convertible notes—boosted the stock yesterday by 2%; it closed at $29.69. The gains continued in afterhours trading, when shares rose another 1.1% to $30.01.

Nevertheless, according to the Wall Street Journal, during the call CEO Gary Kelly also said, “realistically we just can’t expect that things are going to be back to normal in six or 12 months.” Indeed, Southwest estimated that operating revenue would be down as much as 95% in April from a year earlier, with planes flying just 6% full on average. And May would likely be similar.

Considering the company itself said they don’t expect the trend to improve in the next quarter, we don’t expect much room for improvement in the share price as well. Furthermore, the supply-demand balance suggests the stock is heading lower.