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SURF AIR MOBILITY INC. (SRFM)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $23.5M, at the high end of guidance ($21–$24M), with adjusted EBITDA loss of $14.4M within guidance ($12–$15M); GAAP net loss improved year over year to $(18.5)M driven by lower tech and compensation costs and favorable fair-value changes .
- Management issued Q2 2025 guidance of $23.5–$26.5M revenue and adjusted EBITDA loss of $10–$13M and reaffirmed full-year 2025 targets: revenue >$100M and airline operations profitability (positive adjusted EBITDA) .
- Versus S&P Global consensus for Q1 2025: revenue slightly missed ($23.506M vs $23.869M), EPS beat ($(1.09) vs $(1.44)), and EBITDA missed ($(16.42)M vs $(11.47)M). Bolded in Estimates Context section below.*
- Operational catalysts: execution on the Optimization phase (re-fleeting, SOC relocation to Dallas/Fort Worth, SurfOS efficiencies), new interline agreement with Japan Airlines expanding access to 435M consumers, and EAS renewals; management reiterated tariffs are not expected to significantly impact 2025 results .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Q1 revenue delivered at the high end of guidance ($23.5M vs $21–$24M), supporting trajectory to >$100M FY revenue; adjusted EBITDA loss within guidance ($14.4M) .
- Transformation progress: SOC relocation to Dallas/Fort Worth, five older aircraft returned to lessors, and addition of senior aviation leaders to strengthen operations .
- Strategic access and distribution: interline agreement with Japan Airlines (fifth interline; first foreign carrier) to extend booking reach across Hawaii; “expanding our access to 435 million consumers across our interline agreements” .
- Quote: “Our momentum is strong, and our operating metrics continue to improve as we optimize our aircraft fleet, implement new technologies and drive efficiencies.” – Deanna White .
What Went Wrong
- YoY declines: scheduled service revenue down 23% YoY (route exits, January service interruption), on-demand revenue down 25% YoY (profitability focus), weighing on top line despite guidance delivery .
- Q1 service interruption: FAA program compliance issues tied to corrosion/interiors required temporary schedule reduction (not planned), though resolved in-quarter .
- EBITDA vs consensus: adjusted EBITDA loss of $(16.42)M (GAAP EBITDA proxy) worse than S&P consensus (approx. $(11.47)M), reflecting continued investment in maintenance backlog clearance and R&D .*
Financial Results
Core Financials vs Prior Periods
Notes and sources: Q1 2025 statement of operations and reconciliation ; Q4 2024 press release and annual financials ; Q1 2024 quarterly comparatives .
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Trends (YoY change)
Q1 2025 OpEx Mix (GAAP)
Actuals vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global) – Q1 2025
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We continued to make strong progress across multiple initiatives in our Transformation Plan… keeping us on track to achieve profitability in our airline operations in 2025.” – Deanna White .
- “Our EAS business, which represents approximately 40% of our revenue… long-term EAS contracts contain price escalators that act as mitigation to inflationary pressures.” – Oliver Reeves .
- “The interline agreement with JAL… expands our potential access to over 435 million of their customers.” – Deanna White .
- “We estimate that our electric powertrains… will potentially reduce the direct cost of flying by 50%, and our hybrid… by 25%.” – Oliver Reeves .
- “We exited several charter products to focus on profitability… launched a new Jet Card.” – Deanna White .
Q&A Highlights
- EAS budget risk: Management believes low-cost position and DOT “hold-in” practices, with higher subsidy rates, mitigate risk; exploring alternatives if subsidies were reduced .
- Core network: Hawaii and EAS routes are core; clusters in central and East Coast; route decisions based on profitability and footprint fit .
- Route exits and timing: DOT has held the company in some EAS routes longer than planned, with additional subsidies; new Tier 1 routes targeted for 2026 .
- January service interruption: Unplanned; FAA program compliance on interiors/corrosion required schedule reductions; resolved with FAA collaboration .
- SurfOS commercialization: Beta user feedback being integrated; target commercial rollout of modules in 2026 with internal use already driving efficiencies .
Estimates Context
- Coverage remains thin for Q1 2025 (EPS estimates: 1; revenue estimates: 3), limiting robustness of consensus.*
- Q1 2025 comparison:
- Revenue: $23.506M actual vs $23.869M consensus – small Miss.*
- EPS: $(1.09) actual vs $(1.44) consensus – Beat due to reduced tech and compensation costs and favorable fair-value changes .*
- EBITDA: $(16.42)M actual vs $(11.47)M consensus – Miss, reflecting maintenance backlog clearance and continued R&D investment .*
- Implication: Street models likely need lower near-term EBITDA expectations while acknowledging sequential improvement targeted by management (Q2 EBITDA loss guided narrower at $(10)–$(13)M) .*
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Execution credibility: Company delivered Q1 at guided ranges and reaffirmed FY 2025 revenue >$100M and airline operations profitability, a potential stock catalyst if sustained .
- Profitability-first strategy: Exiting unprofitable scheduled routes and recalibrating on-demand (Jet Card, pre-buys) support margin expansion, albeit at the expense of near-term revenue growth .
- Operational reliability improving: Maintenance backlog clearance and re-fleeting are raising completion factors (target 96%), key to sustained profitability .
- Distribution leverage: JAL interline adds international connectivity in core Hawaii market; broader interline network now touches 435M customers, supporting load factor and revenue opportunities .
- Regulatory positioning: EAS (~40% of revenue) benefits from equal cost consideration; management is proactive amid budget reconciliation noise .
- Technology optionality: SurfOS modules are reducing costs and may open 2026 commercialization revenue streams; Palantir partnership deepens strategic moat .
- Near-term trading lens: Expect focus on Q2 delivery vs guidance (revenue $23.5–$26.5M; EBITDA loss $(10)–$(13)M) and continued evidence of airline ops profitability path; watch capital raises and JV progress on electrification/software .