Or you could be patient....could go either way...might be an idea to wait till your sure the US Fed is not going to do something unexpected.
If by the slim chance it did,you would get a much better buying opportunity.
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Singapore inaugral flight fronSIN/CBR has landed at WLG - looks smart on the tarmac
Leaves again tonite - less passengers flying AIR to AKL tonite to connect with the flight to SIN
But loved this tweet (apologies for bringing politics into it)
@JoelRowan: Singapore Airlines, with codeshare partner Wellington City Council Airways first slush-funded vanity flight from Canberra has landed.
I dont think its expected this time around(but its possible)..but Christmas has higher odds..when it happens theres a good chance we may have to buckle up,if that last drop is anything to go by---its certainly got many scared. Just the thought of it got the markets in a tizzy.
You should know by tomorrow morning (Feds decision)
I could be very wrong but ins't increased competition a major threat to profit? Ie AIR's costs on their routes are pretty much fixed, ie if you fly a plane with 100 ppl or with 200 the costs stay the same. But the revenue figure is very variable. Back of envelope stuff....
Revenue $5,000,000
Costs $4,500,000
Profit $500,000
However if revenue were to drop just 10% because passenger numbers are down or they have to discount tickets to get PAX up (like they are offering me a return to London for under $2000 which I am considering this winter) that would wipe out the profit entirely and thus no dividend.
That to me is the big risk.
Where have I gone wrong?
Conversely if revenue were to increase this would impact massively on the profit.
(btw I have been very liberal with my figures and note the annual revenue was $4.5mill or thereabouts and the profit was not $500 exactly but its good for illustration purposes)
Costs are fixed...like oil you mean?
Yield will be down internationally. CL has said AIR will compete aggressively with the competition and filling seats with lower prices has already occurred, hence the share price. Its only in recent times AIR has made money internationally. The thing to remember is AIR makes most of its profit, some say 80%+, on its domestic operation where it has a huge market share. Other international airlines bringing tourists to NZ will benefit AIR domestically.