This article in Forbes about aircraft leasing companies names some publicly traded stocks that appear cheap: Genesis Lease (GLS), AerCap (AER), and Aircastle (AYR). But that cheapness may be a bit deceiving.
Plane leasing looks like a great business. Despite U.S. and global economies facing a slowdown and oil prices making all time highs, demand for planes is still very strong.
However, the more I think about it, the more I realize that this business cannot escape the fate that mirrors its customers - the airlines. I could be wrong, but this business doesn’t really have a sustainable competitive advantage. It’s basically just an arbitrage business: a lessor needs to be able to borrow at a lower rate than airlines and lease planes to an airlines at a rate greater or equal to what they could borrow. Airlines get to keep planes off the balance sheet and show high return on capital, but may try to renege on the lease when times get tough (many did that after 9/11).
I think this is where things get dicey. A global slowdown and a recession will do what it does every time: send airlines in a place so frequently visited by them - bankruptcy. They’ll renege on the leases and leasing companies will get their planes back. But unless they decided to start flying those planes themselves, demand will not be there. Planes will make their usual pilgrimage to the desert.
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This article has 8 comments:
Arvai
The poor results in the United States, while a significant sector of the market, does not mean that international airlines will perform as poorly as those here. Growth in emerging countries, namely China and India has been spectacular, and will continue as these economies mature and air travel replaces rail for the majority of the populations.
One must pick and choose carefully - the right aircraft that are likely to remain green, not being late adopters of technologies facing near-term replacement, and which aircraft to remove from your portfolio on a timely basis while residuals are strong.
Historically, the airlines have been a cyclical business, and while record high fuel prices are depressing earnings, global growth in the industry will continue. That growth will need aircraft, and people to finance them.
Will some aircraft lessors get into trouble, and find that some aircraft hit the desert? Perhaps for older fleets, but the demand for the newest and most fuel efficient aircraft is such that they can quickly be re-leased internationally.
It is easy to be caught up in the woes of the US airline industry, most of which lacks the financial wherewithal for long-term viability, and ignore the underlying demand and global growth.
Ernest S. Arvai
CEO
The Arvai Group, Inc.
But those Irish and psudo Irish citizens dont seem to mind,as they find leasing business a jovial profession which make them stand out in a St Patrick Day parade and gets toasted in their local watering holes by comrades and secret admirers.
I will drink to that!
They dont mind,it is just living dangerously another day!