Stock price when the opinion was issued
It has rebuilt its balance sheet and the valuation is well below the historical average. It has lagged the U.S. airline stocks even though it has initiated a 12 month share buyback program. It is at a lower price today than the price for share buybacks, recent option offerings and insider buying in February. Travel should come off a bit but not as much as the drop in its stock price. Buy 13 Hold 4 Sell 0
(Analysts’ price target is $24.65)Airline stocks are not long-term holds. Travel is discretionary, especially for pleasure. Most profitable part is business travel, which won't make a full recovery to pre-Covid levels. Air travel to US is suppressed. CAD at this low level doesn't bode well for overseas purchasing power. Massively leveraged balance sheet, plus looming tariffs.
It is trading near the levels seen at the early stages of the pandemic. Trade war fears have dragged down the airlines but this is overdone. Air Canada is at an 80% booking level which is normal. Its flights to the U.S. are down but international business is strong. It makes more money on international flights than domestic. The price is still OK. Buy 14 Hold 2 Sell 1
(Analysts’ price target is $23.09)
Canada's largest airline just announced resumption of service from the nation's capital to London UK -- signs of global schedule shuffles and adjusting to declining US bookings. We like that debt is being aggressively retired and shares bought back. It trades at 6x earnings, 2x book and supports a robust 108% ROE. We recommend setting a stop at $9, looking to achieve $18 -- upside potential of 28%. Yield 0%
(Analysts’ price target is $23.42)