Tag: Air Transport

Saia, Inc from 31 January 2008

SAIA reports downside EPS. SAIA reported 4Q:07 EPS of USD 0.05 vs our USD 0.28 estimate and Cons USD 0.26. SAIA also benefited by USD 0.01/share from a lower tax rate. They were negatively impacted by about USD 0.04 related to “an employment matter” and benefited by an estimated USD 0.04 from net fuel impact. Rev, EBIT, and EPS changed y-o-y +11.2%, -68.9%, and -90.7% vs our expectations of +11.3, -21.8%, and -37.3%, respectively.

OR deterioration drives miss. SAIA’s OR deteriorated 410bp vs our expectation of 170bp of deterioration and 190bp in 3Q:07, resulting in EBIT down 69% y-o-y. The larger than expected deterioration was due to the weak pricing environment and several minor cost issues.

Yields ahead of expectations driven by fuel. SAIA’s yields (rev/cwt, gross of fuel) grew 6.1%, ahead of our 4.7% estimate which included a material increase in fuel surcharge. SAIA for the first time did not report yields net of fuel, but we estimate fuel surcharges accounted for almost 5pp of the gross yield growth and real pricing was likely flat to down considering 4% lower weight per shipment and a 4% increase in length of haul.

Tonnage below expectations. SAIA grew tonnage at 5.1% in 4Q:07, below our forecast of 6.5% and down from 8.9% in 3Q:07 as its acquisitions began to grandfather (the Connection closed 11/20/06). Tonnage declined 8% on a proforma basis in 4Q:07 and worsened throughout the qtr, but has improved to -4% in January.

Stock still has a lot of risk. SAIA is struggling with operating and cost issues as it continues to integrate two acquisitions made right into the downturn. We expect many of these issues to continue in the near term as competition in LTL pricing continues to increase in 2008 and we are sharply reducing our 08 and 09 EPS estimates. However, SAIA will likely benefit from potential capacity reduction by its competitors, especially in its core Southern region. For now BS is solid and mgmt has reduced C08 capex meaningfully.

INVESTMENT CONCLUSION: SAIA was up yesterday despite a materially weaker than expected report into the Fed interest rate cut and continued running for cover in the truck sector. SAIA was up 2.3% yesterday compared to our LTL Index excluding it up 3.3% and the S&P 500 down 0.5%. Year to date SAIA is up 2% compared to our LTL index excluding SAIA now up 17% and the S&P 500 down 8%.

We have reduced our C08 and C09 EPS estimates by 56% and 42%, respectively, from USD 1.45 and USD 1.55 to USD 0.63 and USD 0.90 (compared to prior Consensus USD 1.42 and USD 1.76). Based on our reduced forward estimates, SAIA is currently trading at 20.7x and 5.2x our forward year EPS and EV/EBITDA, respectively, compared to its average 1, 3 and 5 year averages of 10.4x, 11.5x and 12.0x, and 4.7x, 4.9x and 5.0x. SAIA’s balance sheet feels solid at this point ending the year with a debt ratio including off balance sheet leases of 48.8% compared to 51.6% at year end 2007. We now project SAIA will bottom with an EPS loss during 1Q:08; however we have little visibility to our estimates. SAIA remains rated Peer Perform.

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Arkansas Best Corporation – report from 31 January 2008

ABFS and the Teamsters announce tentative 5-yr labor agreement. Yesterday ABFS and the Teamsters announced a tentative agreement 2 months ahead of the March 31st expiration.

ABFS’ Teamster employees to receive same standards as YRCW. ABFS has agreed to the same standards as YRCW, now being called the National Freight Industry Standards Agreement. The key provisions under this contract are 1.9% and 7.0% wage and benefit CAGRs, totaling 3.9% overall cost growth per hour per year, up from 3.4% in the prior contract. We expect the deal to be ratified along with the YRCW deal on Feb. 8th.

No withdrawal from Teamsters’ multi-employer pensions. ABFS will continue to contribute and be liable to its multi-employer pension plans under this contract. Although a withdrawal would have required material financing costs, remaining in will result in pension expense growth of about 9% per year. Also, ABFS USD 800M-USD 850M current withdrawal liability will continue to change outside of management’s control.

FASB may chime in. FASB is currently in the research phase of overhauling its standards for multi-employer pension accounting. One key change currently under consideration is moving multi-employer liabilities onto company balance sheets similar to Int’l standards. We believe this would take 3-5 years to implement but it seems to be gaining momentum as a result of the new Pension Act effected Jan. 1st.

Stock feels ahead of itself in the near term. ABFS’ stock is up 65% from its lows in early Jan. into a sense that trucks will see demand bottom before the economy, the Fed’s more aggressive stance, and generally better than expected truck reports. While the near term news about ABFS not being allowed to withdraw from the Teamsters’ pensions could be viewed as positive for intermediate term earnings, we believe it poses a serious long-term risk to ABFS.

INVESTMENT CONCLUSION: ABFS closed up 4% yesterday versus our LTL index ex-ABFS up 3% and the S&P 500 down 0.5%. We believe the market viewed the early contract as well as ABFS not withdrawing from its multi-employer pension plans positively in the near-term, but we are not sure this is the right reaction over a longer time horizon. Although ABFS not withdrawing removes near-term risks of raising capital, adding major leverage to its balance sheet and material financing costs, we believe the long-term risk of remaining contributors is great. We have serious long-term concerns about the Teamster multiemployer pension system, which punishes surviving employers by making them liable for bankrupt companies’ pension costs and is driving the 9% pension expense increases in this contract. We believe if another large contributor to these plans were to go bankrupt and be unable to fund its withdrawal liabilities, these would shift to ABFS and the other remaining employers and would likely drive up pension expenses and withdrawal liabilities further.

ABFS is currently trading at 12.9x and 3.7x our forward EPS and EV/EBITDA estimates. This compares to its 1, 3, and 5 year averages of 11.9x, 11.2x, and 11.6x, and 3.9x, 4.0x, and 4.2x. We believe the recent run up in the truck sector has been largely short covering and long investors seeking early cyclicals with leverage into the Fed Easing cycle, and ABFS, as well as the rest of the group, are likely ahead of themselves in the near term.

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Arkansas Best Corporation

Arkansas Best Corporation (ABFS-$27.45-Peer Perform)

Signs of Hope Drive Stock

IN-LINE REPORT. ABFS reported 4Q EPS generally in-line with expectations (4% below Cons. but well above our low end expectation and with some puts & takes) Rev, EBIT and EPS changed y-o-y by +2%, -5% and -4%, a big acceleration on much easier comps from -5%,-40% and -45% in 3Q. We roughly estimate that ABFS benefited by $0.09 y-o-y from higher fuel rev. net of costs.

TONNAGE LESS WORSE THAN EXPECTED. ABFS reported daily tonnage declines less worse (-1.5%) than exp. in 4Q into easier comps and improved traction with its RPM rollout. Importantly Mgmt noted Dec and Jan tonnage were modestly + y-o-y. Mgmt will not break out how much of this tonnage improvement is related to the increasing traction in the roll out of their next day product, but we suspect most, if not all of it.

REPORTED YIELDS ALSO BETTER THAN EXPECTED. ABFS reported yields up 2.5% y-o-y compared to -0.2% in 3Q. Our rough estimate is that about 3.5pp-4pp of this is related to fuel surcharges which are up 42% over a yr ago and that actual pricing remains down. This would explain the in-line report despite better than exp. reported tonnage, yields, gains on sales & tax rate.

SO, WHY WAS THE STOCK UP 17%? We suspect a combination of short covering into the report, 2 of our competitors defensive upgrades in the morning, as well as the recent rush to own early cyclicals into the news that tonnage had likely bottomed into easier comps. Also we suspect some investors may misinterpret reported yields and arguably temporary benefits from the fuel surcharge, with real pricing improvement.

WHAT TO DO WITH THE STOCK? The truck stocks are en fuego into the Fed’s recent more aggressive stance and signs that 4Q reports were not a total disaster. We noted when we upgraded the sector two weeks ago that we expected the stocks to be very volatile and present many trading opportunities up and down during 2008. Our sense is the group, including ABFS has likely gotten ahead of itself in the near term.

INVESTMENT CONCLUSION: ABFS was up 17% on Friday (compared to -1.6% for the S&P 500 and 2.6% for our LTL Index ex-ABFS) after reporting an in-line 4Q, but noting that tonnage trends had improved in December and January.

We have raised our estimates for C08 and C09 from $2.20 and $2.20 to $2.32 and $2.42 (compared to prior Cons of $2.33 and $2.59), respectively. ABFS is currently trading at 11.8x and 3.3x our upwardly revised forward year rolling EPS and EV/EBITDA estimates, respectively, although our sense is that ABFS will need continued high fuel surcharges relative to a year ago to make these numbers. This compares to its 1, 3 and 5 year averages of 11.9x, 11.2x, and 11.6x and 3.9x, 4.0x and 4.2x, respectively. We note if we add in an estimated $825M in pension liability that it would cost ABFS to exit its multi-employer to its current EV and add about $17M back to EBITDA as a rough estimate of potential savings from a single employer plan, ABFS’ EV/EBITDA would be a much higher than historical 7.7x. We retain our Peer Perform rating on ABFS.

What does ABFS’ report mean for other LTL providers? We were not sure as we have noted previously in preview notes, whether the LTL providers would continue to make money on fuel surcharges net of higher fuel costs in a rising fuel environment, given a recent more competitive rate environment and some customers capping fuel surcharges. Our sense is that ABFS’ report is likely evidence that they did benefit in a rising y-o-y fuel scenario and others should also. We suspect ABFS reported in-line despite better than expected tonnage and yields because pricing is very weak but fuel surcharges helped stem some of that negative drag. Below we estimate that ABFS benefited about $0.09/share in 4Q from higher fuel surcharge net of higher fuel costs. We would expect the other LTL providers to also benefit in 4Q and assuming current diese

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Leipzig/Halle Airport recorded its highest ever traffic figures in 2007 – cargo volume has risen to more than 100,000 tonnes

With a cargo volume of 101,285 tonnes and 2,723,748 passengers handled in 2007, Leipzig/Halle Airport recorded the highest ever traffic figures in its history. The number of flight movements, i.e. take-offs and landings, rose from 42,417 to 50,976, an increase of 20.2 percent over the previous year.

The cargo volume handled at Leipzig/Halle Airport rose from 29,330 tonnes to 101,285 tonnes, an increase of 245 percent compared with 2006.

This development is largely attributable to the growing commitment made by DHL, which, Mondays to Fridays, currently operates more than 30 flights from Leipzig/Halle every day.

Lufthansa Cargo has been using Leipzig/Halle Airport since October last year to operate 21 flights a week to destinations in the United States, in Asia, Africa and Europe.

Eric Malitzke, Managing Director Flughafen Leipzig/Halle GmbH said: “progressive growth in the cargo sector and exceeding the 100,000 tonne mark clearly underline Leipzig/Halle Airport’s ambition to develop into a cargo hub of European importance within the next few years. With DHL opening its European hub this year, this positive trend will continue in 2008”.

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Deutsche Post's DHL buys Singapore facility for 38 million Singapore dollars (USD 26.49 million)

DHL said it has bought a cargo transshipment facility in Singapore from Singapore Airport Terminal Services (SATS) for 38 million Singapore dollars.

The facility has been operating under lease from SATS since 2001.

The facility, which sits on an 18,000 square meter site, is capable of processing 5,300 shipments per hour at its peak and is expected to increase its cargo handling capacity to more than 11,000 shipments per hour by 2011.

“Our infrastructure in Singapore is an important link in our network of express hubs in Asia Pacific, and owning the building allows for future expansion as trade flows increase,” said Stephen Fenwick, DHL Express’ senior vice president for operations in Asia Pacific.

DHL’s hubs in Asia are in Bangkok, Hong Kong, Incheon, Shanghai and Sydney.

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