Air Canada (TSX:AC) Q2 Results: What We Learned

Air Canada (TSX:AC) CEO Calin Rovinescu gave some insightful answers on the latest quarterly conference call. Investor need to pay attention.

| More on:
Business success with growing, rising charts and businessman in background

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s premium investing services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn moresdf

Last week, Air Canada (TSX:AC) released its second-quarter results. The news was terrible.

Total revenue declined of 89% year-over-year. Passenger volumes fell by 96% versus the year before. Cargo revenue actually increased, but not nearly enough to offset the decline in passenger traffic.

Lower revenues crushed the bottom line. Air Canada posted an operating loss of $1.6 billion, with negative EBITDA of $836 million. Executives stressed that the company still has $9.1 billion in liquidity, but it’s clear that the clock is ticking.

“As with many other major airlines worldwide, Air Canada’s second quarter results confirm the devastating and unprecedented effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and government-imposed travel and border restrictions and quarantine requirements,” the company explained.

The most valuable insights, however, were buried deep in the conference call. When executives opened the call up for public questions, their answers were quite revealing.

Read the details

The most obvious takeaway from the call was that Air Canada executives wanted to assure the market that it has plenty of capital to ride out the current storm.

“Our company is fundamentally very solid. Since mid-March, we have raised $5.5 billion in new equity, debt and aircraft financings in the capital markets, providing us with over $9 billion in liquidity as of June 30. The speed and magnitude of this capital raising is also unprecedented,” stressed CEO Calin Rovinescu.

He worked hard to frame this as a vote of confidence from the market, even explicitly stating it in such terms, explaining the capital raise as “…a testament to the confidence capital markets have in our airline and in what we have achieved over the decade.”

I wouldn’t be too sure of his framing, however. Market analysts remain very bearish on airlines. Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun, who knows his customers well, noted in an interview that we’ll likely see a major airline bankruptcy this year. The cost to ensure airline bonds against insolvency has soared since February.

If you run the numbers, airlines simply can’t sustain the current environment. Something has to change.

Will Air Canada survive?

For airlines to survive, passenger traffic will need to pick up quickly, sizeable and sustainably. Air Canada executives are pitching this future hard.

“It appears we passed one hurdle in the second quarter and that travel is resuming, primarily in the domestic market, albeit very slowly at a markedly reduced level,” CEO Calin Rovinescu said optimistically.

Unfortunately, the company can’t afford a slow recovery. Air Canada is losing more than $1 billion every 90 days. It has less than 24 months of capital remaining. If the COVID-19 crisis lasts that long, shareholders will likely end up with nothing.

Even if the company can survive through emergency cash raises, the stock price likely won’t benefit.

“The sad reality is that unless airlines raise new capital, they will go bankrupt,” says Vitaliy Katsenelson, chief investment officer at Investment Management Associates.

“This capital, though it might save them, will reduce the value of their businesses. Equity issuances would permanently dilute shareholders, as future earnings will be shared with a much-increased shareholder base.”

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 Ryan Vanzo has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Coronavirus

little girl in pilot costume playing and dreaming of flying over the sky
Coronavirus

Air Canada Stock: How High Could it go?

AC stock is up 29% in the last six months alone, so should we expect more great things? Or is…

Read more »

eat food
Coronavirus

Goodfood Stock Doubles Within Days: Time to Buy?

Goodfood (TSX:FOOD) stock has surged 125% in the last few weeks, so what happened, and should investors hop back on…

Read more »

stock data
Tech Stocks

If I Could Only Buy 1 Stock Before 2023, This Would Be It

This stock is the one company that really doesn't deserve its ultra-low share price, so I'll definitely pick it up…

Read more »

Aircraft Mechanic checking jet engine of the airplane
Coronavirus

Air Canada Stock Fell 5% in November: Is it a Buy Today?

Air Canada (TSX:AC) stock saw remarkable improvements during its last quarter but still dropped 5% with more recession hints. So,…

Read more »

Airport and plane
Coronavirus

Is Air Canada Stock a Buy Today?

Airlines are on the rebound. Does Air Canada stock deserve to be on your buy list?

Read more »

A patient takes medicine out of a daily pill box.
Coronavirus

Retirees: 2 Healthcare Stocks That Could Help Set You up for Life

Healthcare stocks offer an incredible opportunity for growth for those investors who look to the right stocks, such as these…

Read more »

sad concerned deep in thought
Coronavirus

Here’s Why I Just Bought WELL Health Stock

WELL Health stock (TSX:WELL) may be a healthcare stock and a tech stock, but don't let that keep you from…

Read more »

healthcare pharma
Coronavirus

WELL Stock: The Safe Stock Investors Can’t Afford to Ignore

WELL stock (TSX:WELL) fell 68% from peak to trough, and yet there's no good reason as to why. So now…

Read more »