The Airline With A Success Secret
CBS Evening News: With Fuel Prices Soaring, U.S. Airlines Are Losing Money Fast - All But One
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Play CBS Video Video Southwest Evades Lost Profits Airlines are expected to lose $10 billion in profit this year, but Southwest is still making money. Nancy Cordes reports on how the airline is staying ahead of skyrocketing fuel prices.
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Interactive Industry Turbulence See how the country's top airlines are faring
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In The Spotlight Cutbacks & Setbacks U.S. air travel options shrink amid carrier strife
Southwest Airlines was the only major U.S. carrier to turn a profit in the last financial quarter. It did it without charging a dime for pillows, water, or even checked bags - all while poking fun at its rivals.
What's Southwest's secret? Well, two decades ago, it made a bet on a strategy called "hedging," paying more up-front to lock in the price it pays for oil. Today, the going rate for a barrel of crude is $112 - but Southwest pays just $51.
"Just this year alone, 2008, our fuel hedges will likely save us close to $2 billion," said Gary Kelly, Southwest Airlines' CEO. "And our annual revenues are about $11 billion, so it's a very, very significant part of our success."
But it's far from the only part, according to aviation analyst Peter Goelz.
"Well, Southwest has done it right from the start," he said. "And it starts with the aircraft."
That aircraft, a Boeing 737, is the only jet in the Southwest fleet. That's compared to the six to 11 models most airlines maintain.
"They have less training costs, less spare parts to carry, they have essentially a uni-plane fleet. Smart move," Goelz said.
It is all about efficiency. With just one cabin class, coach, and no assigned seats or meals, boarding goes quickly, and cleaning does, too.
"A plane comes in here to BWI; it's ready to go out in 20 minutes. Nobody else comes close to that," Goelz said.
And crucially, Southwest steers clear of those big hubs with their high landing fees and congestion.
Bypassing, say, Chicago's O'Hare, where one out of every three arriving flights is delayed, it files to nearby Midway, where only one in five arrive late.
Instead of flying to Washington's Reagan National, which charges airlines $12.44 per passenger, it staked a claim in Baltimore, which charges just $4.33 per passenger.
But even high-flying Southwest, with its no-frills approach, isn't immune to the challenges currently rocking the industry. Some analysts predict that next quarter, for the first time in more than 30 years, Southwest will fail to turn a profit.
"It's a very successful fuel-hedging company with an unprofitable airline on the side," said Hubert Horan, an airline industry analyst.
He says Southwest has strayed from the winning formula it developed in the '70s, when it was a maverick airline in the Lone Star state.
Back then, it was all about short-distance flights on sunny routes. And lots of them. Today, the airline flies to 64 cities, losing money on many cross-country routes.
"The industry as a whole is broken. There's way too much capacity that is fundamentally unprofitable, there are airlines that are much much worse run and until those go away," Horan said. "Nobody can make money."
Plus, those legendary hedging deals? Most are set to run out by 2012. If the cost of fuel doesn't drop, Southwest could be over a barrel … just like all the rest.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





As an MBA...yeah, they''ve made some smart moves and decisions...we studied them in one of our cases in school. It''s all about efficiency, and none of the other airlines even come close.
And SHOULDN''T oil be $51 a barrel anyway? I''m sure all of what''s going on right now is from speculation...and betting AGAINST our economy. If it weren''t for the corporate criminals (yeah, probably mostly MBAs) out there, our economy wouldn''t be upside down right now.
http://southwestairlinesalmostkilledyou.blogspot.com/
I almost had to pay for 1 pound over the limit but I just rearranged and all was fine. After all you get TWO FREE bags for every ticketed passanger.
I''ve watched Southwest since the day they made their first takeoff. They do one thing...get you and your bags from point A to point B, intact and on time...and they do it very well. In the history of the airline there has been one fatality...a child on the ground in Chicago when a Southwest airplane went off the end of the runway in a snowstorm.
I worked twenty years in the airline business. It was always a disappointment to me that I didn''t sign on with Southwest. Through five carriers I weathered four furloughs and the disaster that was deregulation, until finally, a bankruptcy drove me to abandon a career I loved.
My heart goes out to all airline employees who go to work every day wondering if, like me, they will hear on the radio after they get home that they no longer have a job.
I wouldn''t go back to that business now for anything. But it was sure fun while it lasted.
Good old days for us old farts...anyway, I digress..
Plus, Herb did not have all those upper management dic*weeds to pay and took care of his employees, who worked hard for Southwest.
- by sistatee-2009 August 19, 2008 12:08 AM EDT
- "Plus, those legendary hedging deals? Most are set to run out by 2012. If the cost of fuel doesn''t drop, Southwest could be over a barrel %u2026 just like all the rest."
- Reply to this comment
See all 15 CommentsBy then, Southwest will be the ONLY airline.