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Sun Country Airlines Holdings, Inc. (SNCY)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered record fourth-quarter revenue of $260.4M and GAAP diluted EPS of $0.24, with adjusted diluted EPS of $0.27; operating income margin was 10.0% and adjusted operating margin 10.6% .
- Results exceeded prior Q4 guidance: revenue beat the $250–$260M range and operating margin topped the 7–9% guide; management cited improving passenger unit revenue and strong cost control .
- Cargo was a key contributor: Q4 cargo revenue reached $28.6M (+13.1% YoY) amid Amazon rate escalations; management expects eight additional Amazon freighters in 2025 to double cargo revenue by next year’s summer run-rate .
- Q1 2025 guidance implies continued strength: total revenue $330–$340M, operating margin 17–21%, and block hours up 7–9%—supported by balanced capacity and strong bookings in leisure trunk routes .
- Catalyst watch: visibility on Amazon ramp, capacity rationalization in scheduled service, and Q1 margin guide support near-term estimate revisions and sentiment; ongoing labor agreements and balance sheet improvements (net debt/Adj. EBITDA ≈ 2x) underpin medium-term stability .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record Q4 revenue and adjusted operating margin; “our fourth quarter results exceeded our initial expectations” and topped revenue and margin guidance set at the beginning of the quarter .
- Cargo momentum: Q4 cargo revenue hit $28.6M (+13.1% YoY) with ~16% cargo revenue per block hour uplift; Amazon contract escalations and eight new freighters in 2025 expected to sharply increase cargo flying .
- Demand and pricing improvement: December scheduled service TRASM increased over 5% YoY, with average total fare per passenger up 2.2%; management noted trunk leisure routes (Phoenix, Vegas, Fort Myers, Orlando, Cancun) are “really good” .
What Went Wrong
- Unit revenue and load factor softness: Q4 scheduled service TRASM declined 1.0% YoY; load factor fell 3.1pp to 81.6% amid capacity shifts and a softer Caribbean mix .
- Cost pressures: adjusted CASM rose 7.6% YoY in Q4; maintenance costs up 14.5% and landing fees/airport rent up 18.4% due to the expiration of COVID assistance .
- Caribbean pockets softer and February intra-quarter demand lighter; management expects scheduled service ASMs to decline 3–5% across Q2–Q4 2025 to accommodate cargo growth—pressuring adjusted CASM mid- to high-single digits for 2025 .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance (Quarterly progression)
Year-over-Year Comparison (Q4)
Segment/Revenue Mix (Q4)
KPIs and Unit Economics (Q4)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our fourth quarter results exceeded our initial expectations, and we achieved a higher total revenue and operating margin than we guided to at the beginning of the quarter.” — Dave Davis, CFO .
- “By summer, we will have all 8 [Amazon] aircraft growing the cargo fleet to 20. I expect cargo revenue will roughly double by this time next year.” — Jude Bricker, CEO .
- “In scheduled service… capacity rationalization starting to inflect unit revenues to the positive… December we saw scheduled service TRASM increase almost 5%, which is where January is.” — Jude Bricker, CEO .
- “Our business is built for resiliency and we’ll continue to allocate capacity between segments to maximize profitability and minimize earnings volatility.” — Dave Davis, CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Demand mix: Europe strength indirectly helps domestic leisure; trunk leisure routes strong; Caribbean somewhat softer vs prior year but still profitable after capacity additions .
- Margin and CASM trajectory: Q1’25 margins expected at least as strong YoY; adjusted CASM to rise mid- to high-single digits in 2025 as scheduled ASMs decline to accommodate cargo ramp .
- Amazon cadence and economics: First aircraft in service by late March; all eight by end of August; fixed per-aircraft rate plus block-hour rate; load factors do not affect margin .
- Network prioritization: Summer schedule cut in lower-yield/defensive markets to lift fares; Q3’25 scheduled capacity down ~10%, rebounding in Q4 .
- Capital allocation: 2025 CapEx $70–$80M (spare engines focus); buyback under consideration dependent on cash flow; leverage improving .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus via S&P Global was unavailable at the time of retrieval due to daily request limits. As a result, comparison vs consensus for Q4 2024 revenue and EPS could not be provided; however, actuals exceeded company guidance ranges on both revenue and operating margin . Values that would normally be retrieved from S&P Global are unavailable at this time.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term: Strong Q1 2025 guide (revenue $330–$340M; OI margin 17–21%) plus December/January TRASM strength should support positive sentiment and potential estimate revisions once consensus is available .
- Cargo ramp: Amazon fleet expansion to 20 aircraft by late summer 2025 and rate escalations materially diversify revenue and stabilize earnings through contractual flying .
- Capacity discipline: Targeted scheduled service reductions in lower-yield markets and focus on trunk leisure routes aim to lift fares and margins through summer 2025 .
- Cost watch: Adjusted CASM increased 7.6% YoY in Q4 and is guided to rise mid- to high-single digits in 2025 as passenger ASMs decline; monitor maintenance, landing fees, and labor costs .
- Balance sheet: Liquidity improved to $205.6M; net debt down to $438.2M; net debt/Adj. EBITDA ~2x—providing optionality for opportunistic buybacks if cash flow tracks guidance .
- Labor stability: Agreements in principle with flight attendants and dispatchers reduce operational risk heading into the ramp year .
- Execution risks: Timing of Amazon aircraft inductions and integration could create short-term utilization noise; Caribbean softness and seasonal demand shifts warrant monitoring .