AL
AIR LEASE CORP (AL)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered 5.1% revenue growth to $725.4M and diluted EPS of $1.21, with pre-tax margin of 25.5% aided by a ~$60M insurance recovery tied to the former Russia fleet .
- Versus S&P Global consensus, AL missed on Primary EPS (actual $0.998 vs. est. $1.089)* and missed revenue ($725.4M vs. est. $743.0M)* as lower sales/trading income and higher interest expense weighed; reported diluted EPS ($1.21) was higher due to non-recurring insurance benefits .
- Management did not host a Q3 call and suspended guidance due to the pending acquisition by Sumisho Air Lease (Sumitomo/SMBC Aviation/Apollo/Brookfield) for $65.00 per share in cash; closing targeted in H1 2026, subject to approvals .
- Operating momentum remained solid: rental revenue +9% YoY on fleet growth and higher portfolio lease yields; orderbook is 100% placed through 2026 and 96% through 2027; committed future rentals at $29.3B; quarterly dividend maintained at $0.22/share .
- Near-term stock catalyst is the merger spread and regulatory/shareholder milestones; operationally, aircraft delivery cadence, yield trajectory, and interest cost normalization remain medium-term drivers .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Rental revenue rose ~9% YoY to $680.9M on fleet growth and higher portfolio lease yields; net income to common increased 47.8% YoY to $135.4M ($1.21 diluted EPS) on higher rental revenue and $60M net benefit from Russia insurance settlements .
- Commercial traction and visibility: 100% of deliveries through 2026 and 96% through 2027 are placed; committed future rentals total $29.3B, underpinned by diversified global customer base (108 airlines, 55 countries) .
- Capital return stability and fleet execution: Board approved a $0.22 dividend (payable Jan 8, 2026); 13 new aircraft delivered ($685M investment); five aircraft sold for $220M; owned fleet reached 503 aircraft (NBV $29.5B) .
Quotes (recent management context):
- “Portfolio yields on our fleet are set to trend higher… strong lease rates on new deliveries [and] extensions… tailwinds… poised to propel us forward for years” (CEO, Q2) .
- “We are very disciplined buyers… cancellation [of A350 freighters] frees up more than $1B in forward CapEx… focused on doing what’s best for our shareholders” (CEO, Q2) .
- “Our leverage target has been 2.5x… there’s been no change to that target” (CFO, Q1/Q2) .
What Went Wrong
- Missed S&P consensus on revenue and Primary EPS in Q3 as “gain on aircraft sales and trading and other income” fell 32% YoY to $44M on lower sales volume; merger-related SG&A (~$9M) and higher interest expense from a higher composite cost of funds (4.29%) also weighed .
- Adjusted pre-tax margin dipped YoY (19.9% vs. 20.3%) despite rental revenue strength, reflecting lower sales/trading income and higher interest costs .
- No earnings call or formal guidance during the quarter due to the pending acquisition, limiting near-term visibility into outlook nuances and Q&A color .
Financial Results
Quarterly Performance (Actuals)
Q3 YoY Revenue Mix
S&P Global Consensus vs. Actuals (EPS/Revenue)
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Operating KPIs and Capital Structure
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: No Q3 call due to pending merger . Themes reflect Q1–Q2 commentary with Q3 operational updates.
Management Commentary
- Strategic focus (Q2 CEO): “Portfolio yields… trend higher… strong lease rates on new deliveries, strong extension rates… fixed rate market financing rates have continued trending lower… tailwinds… propel us forward for years” .
- Capital discipline (Q2 CEO): “We are very disciplined buyers… cancellation [A350F] frees up more than $1B in forward CapEx… focused on doing what’s best for our shareholders” .
- Balance sheet & liquidity (Q2 CFO): “Debt to equity… just below 2.5x target… strong liquidity of $7.9B… $31B unencumbered assets and $29B contracted rentals… key pillars” .
- Q3 disclosure (press release): “As is customary during the pendency of an acquisition transaction, we will not be hosting a conference call or providing guidance… refer to our 10-Q for further detail” .
- Transaction terms: $65 per share all-cash; expected close H1 2026 subject to shareholder and regulatory approvals .
Q&A Highlights (from Q1–Q2)
- Yield uplift and extensions: Management reaffirmed 150–200 bps multi-year yield improvement with higher extension rates (standard 4–6 years; widebodies trending longer) .
- Capital allocation priorities: With leverage at 2.5x, evaluating buybacks, dividends, and selective growth; aim for “meaningful” actions while preserving IG ratings .
- Sale-leaseback economics: Still competitive; will pursue selectively; supply shortfall supports pricing; cancellations free CapEx for higher-return deployments .
- OEM stability: Boeing meeting recent delivery outlooks with quality; Airbus no new slippage since early-year notifications; production ramp risks persist .
- End-of-lease revenue: Expect lower end-of-lease income amid high extension rates; benefit captured via higher extension lease rates and eventual sale values .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 vs S&P Global: Primary EPS actual $0.998 vs est. $1.089 (miss); revenue $725.4M vs est. $743.0M (miss)*. Lower aircraft sales/trading income and higher interest expense offset rental strength .
- Q2 2025 vs S&P Global: Revenue beat ($731.7M vs $710.4M); Primary EPS miss ($1.090 vs $1.980) as S&P “Primary EPS” normalizes for non-recurring insurance benefits that boosted reported diluted EPS to $3.33 .
- Q1 2025 vs S&P Global: Revenue beat ($738.3M vs $708.0M); Primary EPS miss ($1.185 vs $1.662) for same normalization reasons .
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Implications: Street models may trim near-term normalized EPS on lower sales/trading income and funding costs, while maintaining rental growth and yield uplift assumptions given tight supply/strong placement metrics .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core leasing engine healthy: rental revenue +9% YoY, full placement through 2026 and near-full for 2027 supports forward visibility and yield uplift narrative .
- Normalized earnings softer vs. consensus: lower sales/trading income and higher interest expense pressured S&P “Primary EPS”; reported EPS includes non-recurring insurance benefits .
- Balance sheet/liquidity resilient: $7.4B liquidity, ~76% fixed-rate debt, composite cost of funds 4.29%; debt ~$20.2B net of issuance costs .
- Russia claims largely resolved: ~$60M in Q3; 104% of 2022 write-off recovered as of Nov 3, removing a major overhang .
- Corporate event dominates: $65/share all-cash takeout proposal (H1’26 close goal) is the primary near-term trading driver; watch shareholder and regulatory milestones and any change in deal terms .
- Medium-term thesis (if standalone): Tight OEM supply, high extension rates, and disciplined capital deployment support yield and margin expansion; monitor funding costs trajectory and secondary market sales pace .
- Dividend maintained: $0.22/share declared; supports carry into deal close timeline .