American Airlines $400 Million Bet On Cuts—But Slashing Costs Won’t Fix Their Revenue Problem

Delta’s vision is that they’re a premium, mostly non-union airline that pays employees well and negotiates hard with partners, suppliers and even customers. United’s vision is as the nation’s most global air carrier, an increasingly upgauged route network, and more premium seats than before.

On the other hand, American’s vision is cost cuts? Earlier in the year it was flying to Sun Belt destinations that anyone can fly to (and their competitors do), direct sales, and leaning into the AAdvantage program.

They’ve backed off direct sales. Sun Belt flying isn’t new and isn’t generating superior financial performance. And AAdvantage is in some ways marginally better than MileagePlus, United still has more airline partners and better award options globally.

During the airline’s third quarter earnings call on Thursday several questions asked about pieces of the vision – ways that American might improve relative to competitors – and the answers were essentially we’re happy with where we’re at which is troubling because the market isn’t happy with where they’re at, and for good reason.

American Airlines stock is trading for less than half of where it was before the pandemic (while Delta and United have returned to their pre-pandemic trading ranges), and mind you this doesn’t even adjust current prices for inflation since then.

  • JP Morgan’s Jamie Baker asked about how American can improve its network, and Isom responded with how happy they are with their network.

  • Conor Cunningham asked about how American’s product “stacks up to the industry at this point?” in light of United planning free wi-fi (while Delta and JetBlue already offer it, and others are much less expensive – $8 versus American charging $20-$30). Isom punted, saying they’re reconfiguring planes with more premium seats.

So what are they doing that’s different since they’re not making money, aren’t making money relative to their cost of capital, and aren’t making money like their primary competitors are?

  1. Trying to win back some of the corporate business they’ve lost (mean regression)
  2. Cutting costs

The gap between American and competitors isn’t just the loss of managed travel business, and even if they bring all that back it won’t help enough. And their costs are rising, especially labor costs.

American used to say they’d earn within a range of $3 billion to $7 billion per year, on auto-pilot, like an annuity. Now $2.5 billion is considered a home run and the CEO earning his maximum bonus potential – and that’s after 20% inflation masking much of the earnings erosion.

So it all comes down to how much cost can American wring out of its operation and their goal is… $400 million, a drop in the bucket. They’ve talked about things like purchasing efficiencies. Here’s CFO Devon May:

We continue to focus on driving efficiency and productivity through our reengineering the business initiatives.

We are on track to deliver $400 million in cost savings this year with $300 million achieved through the third quarter.

…[The higher labor cost from new union deals] magnifies the importance of all of our efforts to run a lean operation and invest in the right technology to run a more efficient and effective business.

They’re focused on controlling cost and winning back some of the customers they’ve lost in the past year, but costs are still going up overall even with their cost-containment efforts and revenue isn’t rising fast enough. They don’t have a vision to generate revenue – to attract customers who will pay a premium for their product.

American Airlines lacks a vision for the business – the direction they’re heading, the kind of flying they’ll add which will be accretive, how they’re going to win over more customers. The vision was sort of outsourced to Vasu Raja, but he was thrown overboard (and I understand that Devon May played a big role in this). So now the vision is purchasing efficiency.

In his very first question and answer session with employees after becoming CEO of American Airlines, Robert Isom implored them not to spend a dollar more than they need to. After the last earnings call he told employees that the revenue problem is easily fixed but he’s most proud of their control of cost.

Brian Sumers wrote in his wrapup coverage of the Aemrican Airlines earnings call he titled the piece “American Is Still In Denial” and concludes, “American has become a finance-driven organization just as its two biggest competitors realized it makes more sense to prioritize revenue.”

When former Chairman and CEO Doug Parker added former Northwest boss Doug Steenland to the board, effectively to serve as Isom’s rabbi, he noted that the American Airlines board lacked airline experience” and thus the board wasn’t able to understand many of the issues they faced. It was a board built on Parker’s friendships. It’s not a board that has seemed to provide leadership, or that’s held management accountable.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. Agree completely. 3 million miler here (and only lifetime Platinum which is laughable considering what DL and UA give in lifetime status for 3 million miles – for example 2 million miler on DL and that is Platinum which is equivalent to Platinum Pro on AA). Glad I only have 450,000 or so miles left in my account and use those mainly domestic trips. For international I fly almost all international carriers in J (although trying out Delta One SEA-TPE this coming February). Just glad I’m retired with lifetime elite status on AA, DL and UA so I am a free agent. Even though I’m in an AA hub (CLT) I don’t consider myself obligated to fly them and I feel sorry for business travelers (like I was for many year) that are hub captives to any US airline.

  2. Gary, it might soon be time for you to jump ship as well. Nothing is going to change at AA until the Board demands it, which apparently is never going to happen.

  3. In other news I gifted first class AA tickets to family and they said they and others spit their food out onboard 🙁
    Yus premium all the way 😉

  4. Seems like the board isn’t taking their judiciary responsibility seriously.

    AA could be the best in the business. They choose not to.

  5. Sounds like Isom forgot to bring the right meeting notes to the call, yet he always keeps a pocket copy of why he’s worth $30M+ a year…and how focusing on cost-cutting is the path to sustained margin growth.

    Whenever the AA Board decides it’s done listening to his nonsense, the stock price will increase 10% the day the announcement is made.

  6. 35K TWU-represented employees at AA just ratified a 2 year contract extension that provides immediate 12-15% pay raises and 3% more in Jan – certain to cost a couple hundred more in annual costs.

    AA is so large that it is slow-burning its way to the ground. DL and UA owe a portion of their success to AA passengers that have walked away.
    It is only a matter of time before one or both start squeezing even harder.

    WN was once a strong performer and fell hard, prompting Elliott to get involved to make money. No investor even thinks they can turn AA around or at least isn’t willing to try.

    just 25 years ago, AA was a proud, successful airline. how far they have fallen

  7. Gordon Bethune comes to mind and his many quotes… let’s start with this one: “You can make pizza so cheap, no one will eat it.” “You need to control your costs, but you can’t let cost-cutting take over your business. You need to gain the trust of your employees. You need to treat your customers well. Other guys always wanted to talk about market share. They’d lose your bags but they’d show great movies. We always focused on the fundamentals: get Joe Nocera to New York, on time, with his underwear. There’s no secret formula for this #%&*.”

  8. Generally there are two basic schools of thought when it comes to running a business: do what your competitors are doing or the Jeff Bezos (don’t like the guy but he’s correct on this one) approach of ignore what the competition is doing and instead give customers what they want. American is taking a truly novel approach by doing neither. How’s that working out for them?

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