JetBlue Selling Panic Presents Opportunity 5 comments
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My bullish piece on JetBlue (JBLU) back near the end of May has not fared too well. Since the article, the shares have retreated an additional 25% to hit fresh multi-year lows.
The culprit was most likely an additional 7% rise in crude. I was definitely "out to lunch" on this call, but not all is lost, as positive developments could be near.
Legacy Carrier decimation: JBLU's relative strength is higher than its peers. Its 25% plunge the past three months is low compared to United's (UAUA) 85% drop, American's (AMR) 50% slashing and Delta's (DAL) 48% drubbing. The entire sector is extremely oversold and at least due for some kind of "dead cat bounce".
Wall Street seems to be pricing all of the airlines except Southwest (LUV) as chapter 11 scenarios. This is too extreme and the sector's relentless selling seems to be driven by fear rather than logic. The assumption is that oil will run higher or won't see any relief until all the airlines have run out of cash. What if the price of oil drops 30% in the next three months? After such a run-up, the probability of a bubble sell-off is probably more compelling than further appreciation, yet the "Street" does not interpret it that way. Typical overreaction is "par for the course" as the herd tends to sell now and ask questions later. The Amex airline index was at $200 in 1998, and at today's price of $14, the index has shed 93% of its value. This extreme negative sentiment is a hint that we could be close to a bottom.
Replicating Southwest's model: JBLU is a low cost airline, similar to highly successful Southwest. They are trying to adopt more facets of Southwest's business model and they are getting there, slowly but surely. The company has streamlined its operations as well as sought out more valuable routes.
Cash Flow is still positive: JBLU is not burning cash yet. In fact, its first quarter results created $49 million of free cash flow when considering its $41 million depreciation charge. The company has $750 million in cash and $2.7 billion in debt which equates to about a 3.5:1 debt-to-cash ratio, which is better than the industry average.
Recent developments: The company's liquidity has improved. JBLU raised $175 million by selling convertible debentures with a conversion price set at $4.53. It's impressive that JBLU was able to raise this kind of capital in such turbulent market conditions. JBLU's June traffic also increased 2.3% to 2.3 billion passenger miles.
Short interest rising: The short interest has risen an additional 24% to 53 million shares since my last piece, representing about 25% of the shares outstanding. These added short shares represent potential buying power and could be extremely beneficial to longs if any type of "squeeze" ever went into motion.
The bottom line: I still like JBLU, however I wouldn't purchase anymore shares until the stock starts to show some consistent gains (it's better to pay more and be on the same side as the trend). I would be inclined to place a 'stop buy' order at the $4.25 mark and continue averaging up at each $0.25 price increment. JBLU's price action is almost entirely predicated on the price of crude, and if we see any significant correction in the oil bubble, the shares could easily double or triple.
Disclosure: Long JBLU.
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