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Spirit Airlines, Inc. (SAVE)·Q2 2024 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q2 2024 revenue of $1.281B and adjusted operating margin of -13.0% both missed the company’s May guidance ($1.320–$1.340B revenue, -11% to -9% adjusted margin) as elevated industry capacity and ancillary pricing compression kept yields weak; GAAP diluted EPS was -$1.76 and adjusted diluted EPS was -$1.44 .
  • Management launched a transformation strategy (Go Big/Go Comfy/Go Savvy/Go) with no change/cancel fees, heavier bag allowance, and premium seating/amenities to widen the funnel and drive unit revenue over time; adoption will take “more than a year” and requires adequate liquidity .
  • Liquidity ended Q2 at ~$1.1B (cash, ST investments, revolver), supported by ~$186M direct lease/PDP transaction and expected 2024 AOG credits of ~$150–$200M; FY24 liquidity expected to end “over $1.0B” while debt refinancing discussions remain ongoing .
  • Q3 2024 guidance: revenue $1.155–$1.175B and adjusted operating margin -29% to -26% (or -27.5% to -24.5% including AOG earned vs recognized adjustment), reflecting continued industry oversupply and incremental cost related to product rollout and Go Comfy seat blocking .
  • Near-term stock narrative catalysts: execution on transformation and merchandising (including third-party distribution), liquidity actions and noteholder negotiations, and clarity on Pratt & Whitney engine remediation/AOG credits .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Transformation plan rolled out with premium leisure offerings (Go Big/Go Comfy) and improved airport/boarding experience; four bundled options include no change/cancel fees, aiming to expand consideration and drive higher overall revenue over time .
  • Operational reliability held up: Q2 system controllable completion factor 99.8% and system completion factor 98.5%; load factor rose 0.3 pts YoY to 83.2% .
  • Liquidity actions: extended $300M revolver to 9/30/2026 (conditions apply), executed ~$186M direct lease/PDP transaction, recorded $57.1M cash inflow from AOG credits in Q2; year-end liquidity guided “over $1.0B” .

Quote: “We believe the transformation plan we recently announced places us on the path to improved financial performance… we expect to end the year 2024 with over $1.0 billion of liquidity…” — CFO Fred Cromer .

What Went Wrong

  • Revenue shortfall: total revenue -10.6% YoY; TRASM -12.1% YoY as elevated domestic capacity restrained yields; non-ticket revenue per segment fell 9.6% due to competitive ancillary pricing and elimination of change/cancel fees (headwind expected for remainder of 2024) .
  • Profitability pressure: operating margin -11.9%; adjusted operating margin -13.0%; GAAP net loss -$192.9M and adjusted net loss -$157.9M; interest expense nearly doubled YoY .
  • AOG accounting continues to mask the full economic impact in P&L: earned $37.2M in Q2 AOG credits, but recognized only $7.1M in the income statement; margin would have been -10.7% after adjusting for earned vs recognized credits .

Financial Results

MetricQ4 2023Q1 2024Q2 2024
Revenue ($USD Millions)$1,321.8 $1,265.5 $1,280.9
Operating Margin (%)(16.3)% (16.4)% (11.9)%
Net Income ($USD Millions)$(183.7) $(142.6) $(192.9)
Diluted EPS ($USD)$(1.68) $(1.30) $(1.76)
Adjusted Operating Margin (%)(12.4)% (13.9)% (13.0)%
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($USD)$(1.36) $(1.46) $(1.44)

Segment revenue breakdown

MetricQ4 2023Q1 2024Q2 2024
Passenger Revenue ($USD Millions)$1,296.7 $1,239.3 $1,253.8
Other Revenue ($USD Millions)$25.0 $26.2 $27.1

KPIs and unit metrics

MetricQ4 2023Q1 2024Q2 2024
TRASM (cents)8.94 9.38 9.05
Average Yield (cents)11.17 11.63 10.89
Fare Revenue/Segment ($)48.24 48.08 45.02
Non-ticket Revenue/Segment ($)66.60 68.95 63.44
Total Revenue/Segment ($)114.84 117.03 108.46
CASM (cents)10.40 10.92 10.13
Adjusted CASM ex-fuel (cents)6.75 7.67 7.36
Load Factor (%)80.1 80.7 83.2
Aircraft Utilization (hours)11.2 10.4 10.6
Fuel Price/Gallon ($)3.18 2.90 2.78

Q2 2024 actual vs company guidance vs estimates

MetricCompany Guidance (May 6)Actual (Q2 2024)S&P Global Consensus
Revenue ($USD Millions)$1,320–$1,340 $1,280.9 N/A (consensus unavailable)
Adjusted Operating Margin (%)(11)% to (9)% (13.0)% N/A (consensus unavailable)

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Total Revenue ($USD Millions)Q2 2024$1,320–$1,340 $1,280.9 (actual) Lower vs guide
Adjusted Operating Margin (%)Q2 2024(11)% to (9)% (13.0)% (actual) Lower vs guide
Total Revenue ($USD Millions)Q3 2024N/A$1,155–$1,175 New
Adjusted Operating Margin (%)Q3 2024N/A(29.0)% to (26.0)% New
Adj. Operating Margin (AOG-adjusted) (%)Q3 2024N/A(27.5)% to (24.5)% New
Fuel Cost/Gallon ($)Q2 → Q3 2024$2.80 (Q2E) $2.65 (Q3E) Lower
Total Other (Income) Expense ($MM)Q2 → Q3 2024$35.0 (Q2E) $40.6 (Q3E) Higher
ASMs vs 2023 (%)FY 2024Flat to up low-single digits Flat to down low-single digits Lowered
Capital Expenditures ($MM)FY 2024$(30) (net) $(20) (net) Higher (less negative)
Pre-delivery Deposits (Refunds), net ($MM)FY 2024$(175) $(175) Maintained

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q4 2023 and Q1 2024)Current Period (Q2 2024)Trend
Product transformation / merchandisingPlanning stand-alone strategy, testing merchandising shifts; non-ticket trends improved; Analyst Day hinted Launch of four travel options (Go Big/Comfy/Savvy/Go), no change/cancel fees, distribution expansion into third parties; premium/value focus Accelerating execution
Supply chain / Pratt & Whitney GTFAOG expected to average ~25 in 2024 and rise later in year; long wing-to-wing times; negotiation on compensation Earned $37.2M Q2 AOG credits, recognized $7.1M; liquidity benefit $150–$200M in 2024; AOGs ~20 avg in 2024; 2025 AOGs expected to escalate to ~67 by year-end Ongoing constraint; mitigation improving liquidity
Macro/leisure capacity oversupplyDomestic TRASM pressure; off-peak weakness; network trimming and day-of-week adjustments TRASM -12.1% YoY; guidance for Q3 TRASM down 6.4%–8%; continued oversupply, particularly into off-peak; capacity managed via more less-than-daily routes Persisting headwind
Regional trends (LatAm/Caribbean)Weakness in Cancun/Caribbean; careful exposure management; exits/suspensions Mix reduced back to ~15%; capacity heavy region; cautious stance Rationalizing exposure
Regulatory/legal / DOT rulesCommentary against DOT rule changes; merger blocked; focus on stand-alone plan Debt maturity discussions ongoing; credit card deposit arrangement clarified; not a CrowdStrike customer; IT outage impact ~ $7.2M Liquidity/creditor focus
Technology/marketingLimited distribution of premium seat historically; increasing 3rd-party distribution; hiring Tombras agency Execution underway; rapid rollout Aug 16/27 Execution phase

Management Commentary

  • “Elevated domestic industry capacity… made it difficult to increase yields, resulting in disappointing revenue results for the second quarter of 2024.” — CEO Ted Christie .
  • “Operating margin for the second quarter was negative 13%. Had we been able to recognize all of the AOG credits earned during the quarter, our operating margin would have been negative 10.7%.” — CFO Fred Cromer .
  • “We will offer 4 travel options that all include the flexibility of no change or cancellation fees… provide guests the opportunity to choose a premium leisure experience… leveraging our low-cost position.” — CEO Ted Christie .
  • “We are offering more day-of-week markets… suspended 42 routes and introduced 77 new ones [in Q3 vs prior year].” — CCO Matt Klein .
  • “We expect it will take more than a year before we realize the full financial benefits of our transformation plan…” — CFO Fred Cromer .

Q&A Highlights

  • Pricing and distribution strategy: Bundled products to be merchandised via third parties, opening new customer segments; systems prepared for rapid rollout .
  • Capacity/utilization: Off-peak trims driving lower utilization; more pronounced peak vs off-peak scheduling; Go Comfy blocks 6 seats per departure (marginal unit cost impact) .
  • Liquidity/PDP transaction: ~$186M direct lease/PDP raised; 36 future aircraft to be direct-leased, PDPs refunded; additional structured PDP advances for 52 aircraft .
  • Pratt & Whitney AOG outlook: Revised parts entering new deliveries; MRO wing-to-wing times >400 days; 2025 AOGs projected to ramp throughout year .
  • Credit card deposit arrangement: Deposit at parent bank (unrestricted cash); date aligns with bondholder discussions; not a CrowdStrike customer but suffered ~$7.2M Q3 impact via third-party outage .

Estimates Context

  • S&P Global (Capital IQ) consensus estimates for Q2 2024 revenue, EPS, and EBITDA were unavailable through our tool at the time of retrieval; as such, estimate comparisons are not provided. We anchored performance versus company-issued guidance and actuals from SEC 8-K filings and the earnings call .
  • Given the magnitude of misses versus company guidance (revenue and adjusted margin), we would expect sell-side models to revise down near-term unit revenue and margin trajectories, with heightened focus on Q3 guide and transformation adoption timing .

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Q2 missed company guidance across revenue and adjusted margin, underscoring the impact of leisure capacity oversupply and ancillary pricing pressure; expect continued unit revenue headwinds into Q3 per guide .
  • Transformation strategy is substantive and could structurally expand revenue via premium leisure products and distribution, but management guides that benefits will phase in over “more than a year”; near-term P&L includes rollout costs and Go Comfy capacity effects .
  • Liquidity remains a strategic focus: ~$1.1B at Q2, “over $1.0B” expected at FY-end, supported by AOG credits ($150–$200M) and financing actions; watch progress on noteholder negotiations and additional aircraft-related transactions .
  • Pratt & Whitney AOG dynamics remain the largest operational constraint; margins and CASM ex-fuel are pressured until engine availability normalizes; 2025 AOG projections (up to ~67 by year-end) imply continued capacity management and potential revenue dilution .
  • Network/route hygiene continues: more less-than-daily routes, off-peak trimming, and reduced LatAm/Caribbean exposure back to ~15%; monitor domestic demand normalization and shoulder-season performance .
  • Near-term trading lens: risk skewed to downside until evidence of unit revenue traction (third-party merchandising, premium adoption) or industry capacity rationalization emerges; liquidity milestones and debt refinancing updates are potential catalysts .
  • Medium-term thesis hinges on successful execution of product/brand strategy while preserving low-cost leadership (target CASM ex-fuel ~$0.08 run-rate), enabling margin repair once supply/demand balances improve .
Notes: All figures and statements are sourced from Spirit Airlines’ Q2 2024 Form 8-K (including Exhibits 99.1/99.2/99.3) and the Q2 2024 earnings call transcript, as cited inline. S&P Global consensus estimates were unavailable via our tool at time of analysis.