Weiss Gold Veteran Makes Shocking New Call

Weiss expert Sean Brodrick went out on a limb last year and declared a historic event would send the yellow metal to $3,150. People laughed at him at the time, but he was off by just two days. Now, Sean has a shocking new prediction for gold ... and reveals a little-known way to get ahead of this bull market.

How much will Southwest Airlines change to boost profits? Some details are emerging

DAVID KOENIG
September 26, 2024

DALLAS (AP) -- Leaders of Southwest Airlines are set to explain how they plan to remodel the airline to change with consumer tastes -- and maybe keep their own jobs.

They will give more details at an investor meeting Thursday about dumping so-called open seating, charging a premium for the best seats, and launching red-eye flights.

The changes to some of Southwest's quirky habits are designed to reverse its shrinking profits and slumping stock price. It's unclear whether the changes will work, but they could leave an airline that bears little resemblance to Southwest over the last 50 years -- a carrier that still has a core of rabid fans.

Southwest has been contemplating an overhaul for months, but the push for radical change became even more important to management this summer, when Elliott Investment Management targeted the company for its dismal stock performance since early 2021.

Elliott now owns more than 10% of Southwest shares and is the airline's second-biggest shareholder. The hedge fund wants to fire Chairman Gary Kelly and CEO Robert Jordan and replace two-thirds of Southwest's board.

Southwest gave ground this month, when it announced that six directors will leave in November and Kelly will step down next year. The airline is digging in to protect Jordan, however.

Despite its demand that heads roll, Elliott has said it wants to work with Southwest to improve the company's financial results. Southwest doesn't seem interested in collaboration. It adopted a poison-pill defense to make an Elliott takeover more difficult.

Elliott, the hedge fund controlled by billionaire financier Paul Singer, increased its pressure on Southwest this week by saying that it intends to call a special shareholder meeting as soon as next week to make the case for a board overhaul. Elliott has a slate of 10 potential nominees, including former airline CEOs.

"We do not support the company's current course, which is being charted in a haphazard manner by a group of executives in full self-preservation mode," Elliott said this week in a letter to other shareholders.

CEO Jordan fired back on Wednesday, saying it is Elliott that wants to fly solo by lobbing "another negative press public ambush" instead of contributing to Southwest's "transformational plan."

"We're willing to compromise, but acquiescing to a single shareholder's demand for control of the company is not a compromise," Jordan said. "There's a lot to be excited about in Southwest, and we will not allow Elliott's public attacks to distract us."

While Thursday's event is aimed at investors, it will also be of keen interest to consumers, who should learn new details about how assigned seating and premium seats will work on Southwest. The open-boarding system it has used for more than 50 years will disappear, and passengers will be assigned seats, just like on all the other big airlines.

Southwest says its surveys show that 80% of its customers now want to know their seat before they get to the airport instead of picking among the open seats when they board the plane.

Southwest still lets passengers check two bags for free. Jordan said recently that Southwest has no plans to end that policy, but the airline has surveyed customers about it.

U.S. airlines brought in more than $7 billion in revenue from bag fees last year, with American and United reaping more than $1 billion apiece. Wall Street has long argued that Southwest is leaving money behind.

But Southwest has built years of advertising campaigns around bags-fly-free. Taking away that perk could change the airline's DNA as much as -- or maybe more -- than dumping open seating.

Tom Fitzgerald, an airline analyst with TD Cowen, said investors will be interested to see if Southwest introduces bag fees, a cut-rate "basic economy" fare, or offers changes to its Rapid Rewards frequent-flyer program.

The analyst said a major topic of interest to investors will be whether Southwest plans to reduce its flying next year instead of growing, and whether it plans to keep shrinking the workforce. Southwest expects to cut about 2,000 jobs this year through attrition.

Company management heads into the investor day having angered an important interest group: its own workforce. The airline told employees Wednesday that it will make sharp cuts to service in Atlanta next year, resulting in the loss of 340 pilot and flight attendant positions.

The pilots' union said it was "simply amazing" that Southwest was retreating in such a huge market "because this management group has failed to evolve and innovate." That echoed a key Elliott talking point.

"Our flight attendants are overwhelmed. They are paying the price for poor management decisions on behalf of Southwest Airlines," added Alison Head, a flight attendant and union official in Atlanta.

The unions are watching the fight between Elliott and airline management, but they are not taking sides. "That's between Southwest and Elliott, and we'll see how it plays out," Head said.

However, the unions are concerned that more of their members could be forced to relocate or commute long distances to keep their jobs. Southwest's chief operating officer told employees last week that the airline will have to make "difficult decisions" about its network to improve its financial performance.

Elliott seized on that comment, saying that Southwest leaders are now "taking any action - no matter how short-sighted - that they believe will preserve their own jobs."

Elliott's demands include that Southwest bring in new leaders from outside the company, overhaul its board, and conduct a comprehensive business review to consider all options for increasing profitability.

The hedge fund succeeded in seeing its favored candidate become the new CEO at Starbucks earlier in September.

Shawn Cole, a founding partner of executive-search firm Cowen Partners, whose firm has worked for other airlines but not Southwest, believes Southwest is too insular and should follow the recent examples of Starbucks and Boeing and hire an outsider as CEO. He thinks many qualified executives would be interested in the job.

"It would be a challenge, no doubt, but Southwest is a storied airline that a lot of people think fondly of," Cole said. "If Boeing can do it, Southwest can do it."

Continue Reading...

Popular

Marjorie Taylor Greene Buys Blue Chip Stock Near 52-Week Low

Marjorie Taylor Greene is known for buying multiple stocks at a time, based on recent disclosures. A new filing shows one stock bought in November.

Marjorie Taylor Greene Goes Bargain Shopping, Discloses Buying These Two Stocks At 52-Week Lows

Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene disclosed some new stocks recently. Unlike past trades in 2024 and 2025, the latest disclosure is rather unique.

Is Elon's Empire Crumbling? - Ad

Jeff Brown - the legend who called Tesla and Nvidia early - says Elon is about to launch a $25T AI revolution. This isn't another chatbot. It's real-world AI that could 14X the impact of ChatGPT. But after January 29, it may be too late.

These are the 37 donors helping pay for Trump's $300 million White House ballroom

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump says his $300 million White House ballroom will be paid for “100% by me and some friends of mine.”

Schwab: Half Of US Investors May Ditch Other Assets For ETFs — 4 Funds To Watch

Nearly half of ETF investors could go all-ETF within five years, Schwab says. Here's how they're building portfolios with funds like ITOT, BND, and XLK.

Trump Signs Law to Launch Dollar 2.0 - Ad

Trump just signed law S.1582, unleashing the biggest money shift in 100+ years. For the first time since 1913, private firms - not the Fed - can mint a "Dollar 2.0." Treasury says it could drain $6.6T from banks and pay 10X current savings rates. Early investors in minting firms could see 40X returns by 2032.

JPMorgan Forecasts Bitcoin Bottom, Anticipates $28.3 Trillion Challenge To Gold By 2026

Analysts at JPMorgan have pinpointed the lowest point of the ongoing Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) price fall and also projected a substantial chall

SEC Opens Civil Probe Into Jefferies Over $12B First Brands Collapse

The SEC is investigating Jefferies over its disclosures tied to First Brands' $12B collapse, as CEO claims the firm was defrauded.

Why Is a $116B Mining Giant Backing a $10M Firm? - Ad

Rio Tinto rarely makes early-stage bets. Yet one small N. American firm earned its trust with projects in lithium, uranium, and titanium - all vital to U.S. defense and energy independence.

Wendy's to close hundreds of US stores in bid to halt falling profit

Wendy’s plans to close hundreds U.S. restaurants over the next few months in an effort to boost its profit.

What to know about the apartment tower fire in Hong Kong

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong firefighters were making a final push to try and find any survivors from the city's , going apartment-to-apartment in the high-rise complex in an exhaustive search.

Global Demand for Defense Metals Is Surging 7X - Ad

Lithium, uranium and titanium are at the center of a global race. Nations are scrambling to secure them for fighter jets, EVs, and reactors. One N. American project could help fill the West's critical-minerals gap.

Warren Buffett Initiates Alphabet Position, Trims Apple In Q3 — Here Are Berkshire's Moves

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway took a new stake in a member of the Magnificent Seven, while lowering its stake in Apple in the third quarter.

85% Off Proven Crypto Timing Model - This Weekend Only! - Ad

Juan Villaverde's crypto timing model has called every major market turn since 2012. It's now signaling the next big move, and he believes these coins could have big upside. With the market at a critical moment, you can access his latest signals this weekend for just $19.

China announces restrictions on chemicals after deal with Trump on fentanyl tariffs

WASHINGTON (AP) — China said Monday it is making good on its pledge to crack down on chemicals that can be used to make fentanyl, a key issue for President during recent talks with Chinese leader as they aimed to .

TSLA, PLTR, IREN And More: 5 Stocks That Dominated Investor Buzz This Week

Retail investors talked up five hot stocks this week (Nov. 3–7) on X and Reddit's r/WallStreetBets: TSLA, PLTR, MSTR, AMD, IREN.

Is Nvidia About to Spark Another 150X Opportunity This Black Friday? - Ad

Nvidia once handed investors the chance to make 150X on its breakthrough AI chips. Now, legendary investor Louis Navellier says a new invention-perfectly timed for Black Friday-could be even bigger.

Purdue Pharma's deal means money for some victims, end of Purdue company name. Here's what to know

A judge said Friday that he planned to approve a deal and members of the Sackler family who own the company to settle thousands of lawsuits over the toll of opioids, allowing money to start flowing to victims as soon as next spring.

Trump Barred From Deploying Oregon National Guard To Portland, Judge Cites State Sovereignty

A federal judge handed down a decisive ruling on Friday, blocking Trump's attempt to send Oregon's National Guard to Portland.

Trump Issues Surprise Emergency Order - Ad

A new Trump emergency order just took effect. It could reset the U.S. economy, impact 65M Americans, and trigger a major wealth shift tied to a $257T force Buffett called the greatest transfer of wealth. Billionaires are already positioned. If you want in, time is short.

Why Is Sigma Lithium Stock Gaining Friday?

Sigma Lithium posts Q3 revenue of $28.5M, EPS loss narrows to 10 cents, as sales volumes rise 21% and lithium prices jump 33% Q/Q.

Legally "Skim" $6,361 Into Your Account? - Ad

A former hedge fund manager is now sharing his "Skim Codes" with regular people. They're not stocks. They're not crypto. They're 18-character codes designed to profit from recent market conditions. All you have to do is punch them into an ordinary brokerage account. 84% of these codes have given people the chance to generate cash payouts so far... and his next code is going out any day now.

Trump Administration Wins Temporary Supreme Court Reprieve In Fight Over Billions In SNAP Payments For 42 Million Americans

The Supreme Court temporarily froze a lower court ruling that had compelled the Trump administration to immediately provide full federal food benefits to roughly 42 million Americans.

Harvard University Increased Its Bitcoin IBIT Stake By 257% In Q3: 'As Good A Validation As An ETF Can Get'

Harvard University significantly increased its stake in the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF, according to the latest 13F filing released on Friday.

"Tech Prophet" Who Predicted the iPhone Now Predicts... - Ad

George Gilder - who predicted the iPhone 17 years early and gave Reagan the first microchip - is making his boldest call yet. He says an American nanotech "super-convergence" could mint more millionaires than any event in recent memory. He's found 3 stocks set to benefit the most.

Summit of EU, Latin America and Caribbean nations aims to strengthen ties amid US military operation

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Representatives of European, Latin American and Caribbean nations will meet Sunday in Colombia to try to strengthen ties amid divisions in the Western Hemisphere over targeting alleged drug-carrying vessels.

Weiss Gold Veteran Makes Shocking New Call - Ad

Weiss expert Sean Brodrick went out on a limb last year and declared a historic event would send the yellow metal to $3,150. People laughed at him at the time, but he was off by just two days. Now, Sean has a shocking new prediction for gold ... and reveals a little-known way to get ahead of this bull market.

Serbia passes a special bill enabling Trump's son-in-law to build luxury complex despite opposition

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbian lawmakers on Friday passed a special law clearing the way for a proposed real estate project that would be financed by an investment company linked to Donald Trump’s son-in-law despite and legal hurdles.

Cipher Mining Stock Pops As JPMorgan Moves To Overweight

Cipher Mining shares are rising Monday after JPMorgan upgraded the stock to Overweight and raised its price target to $18.

Is Elon's Empire Crumbling? - Ad

Jeff Brown - the legend who called Tesla and Nvidia early - says Elon is about to launch a $25T AI revolution. This isn't another chatbot. It's real-world AI that could 14X the impact of ChatGPT. But after January 29, it may be too late.

'No hire' job market leaves unemployed in limbo as threats to economy multiply

WASHINGTON (AP) — When Carly Kaprive left a job in Kansas City and moved to Chicago a year ago, she figured it would take three to six months to find a new position. After all, the 32-year old project manager had never been unemployed for longer than three months.

TSMC Chief CC Wei Says Nvidia CEO 'Wants More Chips' As Jensen Huang Enjoys Hotpot In Taipei And Praises The Taiwanese Foundry: 'No TSMC, No Nvidia'

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang praised TSMC as vital to his company's success during his Taiwan visit, where he met TSMC chief CC Wei over hotpot and reportedly requested more chips amid surging AI demand and U.S. export restrictions.

Trump Signs Law to Launch Dollar 2.0 - Ad

Trump just signed law S.1582, unleashing the biggest money shift in 100+ years. For the first time since 1913, private firms - not the Fed - can mint a "Dollar 2.0." Treasury says it could drain $6.6T from banks and pay 10X current savings rates. Early investors in minting firms could see 40X returns by 2032.

Flying-Taxi Maker Archer Loses Altitude As Investors Question Costly Airport Move

Archer Aviation Inc. (NYSE: ACHR) shares down on Q3 results and plans to acquire Hawthorne Airport for $126 million.

Asian shares sink, tracking a tech-led sell-off on Wall Street

BANGKOK (AP) — Asian shares tumbled on Tuesday, with benchmarks in Tokyo and Seoul sinking more than 3%, after and other -related shares pulled U.S. stocks lower.

Why Is a $116B Mining Giant Backing a $10M Firm? - Ad

Rio Tinto rarely makes early-stage bets. Yet one small N. American firm earned its trust with projects in lithium, uranium, and titanium - all vital to U.S. defense and energy independence.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright trendadvisor.net
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service