THE HEDGEYE EDGE
United Continental (UAL) is a high cost airline that has struggled to generate positive free cash flow in a favorable economic environment.
The road ahead looks increasingly rough for UAL. Our pricing data suggests they have exited a price war with a lower cost airline. What did UAL gain? Flat market share growth and lots of shareholder pain.
It is typically easier to take fares down than back up, particularly if the goal is to drive higher utilization and ASM growth in a higher fuel price environment. The highest cost, legacy operators, like United Continental (UAL), who have basically ceded share to keep pricing high, are losing share to nimble, low-cost providers. We continue to think that UAL will be trapped by an unpossible dilemma, choosing between lower fares, higher share, and more rapid cash burn versus higher fares, more rapid share loss, and slower cash burn.
UAL burns cash – Free Cash Flow is negative. If one values UAL as an operating company, it should be worth the present value of future free cash flows to equity. If an airline burned cash over a 6 year period during decent economic activity, and burned cash in 2017, which was a very robust macro economy, a period over which its fleet aged and it “was shrinking”, what would that equity be worth?
BOTTOM LINE
We continue to see UAL struggling to generate cash in 2018. The company is flailing as it copes with an inferior cost and hub structure in addition to a deteriorating balance sheet. With fuel prices and competitive intensity both looking like headwinds in 2018, we expect shares of UAL to trend lower.