Madhuchanda DeyMoneycontrol Research
Iconic investor Warren Buffett, who for the long considered airlines as a “death trap for investors”, reportedly picked up stakes in four US carriers in the third quarter of 2016.
Ever since the Sage of Omaha’s newfound love for airlines came to be known, Indian investors have piled into stocks from the sector. In the past one month, Jet Airways and SpiceJet have rallied 11.5 percent and 17 percent respectively, outperforming a 2.6 percent gain in the Nifty.
Recent press reports indicate that GoAir would like to strike when the iron is hot – the company is readying plans to go public and may want to ride the Buffett wave.
So what has changed for the industry? A lot, according to Buffett. The value investor has seen quite a few fundamental factors turning positive in the space.
Firstly, gains are coming from consolidation in the industry that has cooled capacity expansion. Secondly, airlines are turning profitable not only due to falling crude prices but also ancillary revenue from “unbundled” services—charging for checked bags, seat upgrades, food and other things. Thirdly, Buffett is bullish on the US economy. The airline industry can only do well if the broader economy does well, which is something Buffett anticipates. Finally, while the exact acquisition cost of his airlines position isn’t known, he nevertheless bought them relatively cheap – when crude had already rallied from its lows.
So is there wind beneath the wings for Indian carriers?
If we follow Buffett, some of the fundamental factors support the Indian aviation sector too. There is no gainsaying that India remains an attractive market which has been growing at a healthy clip - passenger growth has remained above 20 percent for the 13th consecutive month.
Hence, despite the improvement in load factor, earnings of airline companies have weakened as they face the twin headwinds of softer yield and rising crude (fuel nearly 40 percent of costs).
On the ancillary revenue front, while the growth at 14 percent in the last two years look healthy, its share at 14 percent is unlikely to move the needle in any meaningful way in the near future.
The over-leveraged balance sheet of the industry is partly to blame as existing players fight it out to retain market share. Other than Interglobe Aviation (which operates market leader IndiGo), the other two listed entities namely SpiceJet and Jet Airways have high leverage and low-interest coverage ratio.
The state-owned Air India has total debt of Rs 46,000 crore. So unless the vicious cycle of high leverage resulting in desperation to retain market share and hence lower yield is broken, financial performance will be contingent on windfalls like falling crude prices. Here, a debt recast at Air-India may be a useful first move.
The fan followers of Buffett in India should keep a hawk eye on yields before turning fundamentally bullish on Indian airlines, and that holds true for GoAir as much as anyone else.
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