Is Air Canada’s Stock Preparing to Take Flight?

Things inside and outside the airline are lining up to push up its stock, but how high can it go?

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Thanks to several cost-cutting initiatives at Air Canada (TSX: AC.B) the company’s financials have experienced a noticeable turnaround. Investors have rallied behind the changes, pushing the stock from $2.53 per share on June 25, 2013 to $9.11 on June 25, 2014. This is a rather impressive single-year growth spike, but is this the end of the stock’s rally or just its first waypoint?

Several analysts have given some rather positive price targets in the past couple of weeks. First, let’s take a quick look at the changes and circumstances that have led analysts to drastically raise their price targets.

The rouge effect

Air Canada is looking to use its rouge discount carrier to its fullest potential by using it to offset its costs by $100 million over the next five years. The plan is to transfer several leisure routes to the rouge banner, mostly western Canadian flights heading to the southern U.S. By doing this, Air Canada is looking to reduce cost per available seat mile by 15%. Rouge aircraft operate on an average cost of 21% less than their Air Canada counterparts, by operating with lower overhead and employing a more flexible workforce.

The loonie vs. the price of fuel

Back in April, competitor WestJet (TSX: WJA) reported that for every cent that the loonie fell, its operating costs would rise by $13 million. This is due to the increased price of fuel paid in U.S. dollars, which makes up $11 million of the estimated operational increases. The higher price of fuel is a problem that is faced by Air Canada as well. However, with the loonie back on an upswing, closing at $0.93 on Wednesday, operational costs can be expected to be lower during the current quarter.

Higher load factors

Last month, Air Canada posted a record system load factor of 83.3%, up from 81.8% last May. Overall traffic also increased by 10.5%, far beyond the 6.5% estimated by insiders. This is a combined number for Air Canada and rouge.

Air traffic analysts

With all of this information under consideration, an analyst over at BMO Nesbitt Burns has raised his price target from $10.00 to $12.00. This is slightly above the average price target of $11.40, but there are other analysts that see an even brighter future for Air Canada. One analyst at RBC Capital Markets believes the stock could go as high as $17 in the near future, a 42% increase over his last projection. Over the long term, the same analyst believes that under a best-case scenario the stock could climb as high as $30.00.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Cameron Conway does not own any shares in the companies mentioned.

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