Earnings Call
Alaska Air Group, Inc. (ALK)
Earnings Call Transcript - ALK Q1 2021
Operator, Operator
Good morning. My name is Thea, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Alaska Air Group 2021 First Quarter Earnings Release Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded and will be accessible for future playback at alaskaair.com. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session for analysts. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Alaska Air Group's Managing Director of Investor Relations, Emily Halverson. Please go ahead.
Emily Halverson, Managing Director of Investor Relations
Thank you, Thea, and good morning. Thanks for joining us for our first quarter 2021 earnings call. This morning, we issued our earnings release, which is available at investor.alaskaair.com. On today's call, you'll hear updates from Ben in his new role as CEO, and he will be joined by Andrew and Shane for a commercial and financial update. Several others from our management team are also on the line to answer your questions during the Q&A portion of the call. Our business and outlook continue to be significantly impacted by the global health and economic crises that are underway. In the first quarter, Air Group reported an adjusted net loss, excluding special items and mark-to-market adjustments, of $436 million. We went from burning approximately $4 million a day last quarter to cash generation of approximately $1 million a day in March under the same definition. We believe we are among the first in the industry to have achieved this milestone. It marks a critical point in recovery that enables us to turn our attention to the future. Our comments today will include forward-looking statements about future performance, which may differ materially from our actual results. Information on risk factors that could affect our business can be found in our SEC filings. We will also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, such as adjusted earnings and unit costs, excluding fuel. And as usual, we have provided a reconciliation between the most directly comparable GAAP and non-GAAP measures in today's earnings release.
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Thanks, Emily, and good morning, everyone. I appreciate all of you joining us today for an update on our business. As this is my first call as CEO, I thought I'd share some of my thinking and where I will spend my time, energy, and focus over the next several years. I've been with Alaska for 17 years; I've come to know and love what our company is all about: our people and our culture, our focus on safety and operational excellence, our reputation for customer service, and our financial discipline and track record. Over the years, we have truly embraced a balanced approach to delivering for all stakeholders, and I will continue to nurture this approach and build on that legacy. But we also need to grow and do better in other areas that I look forward to developing, such as how we manage to reduce our climate impact, ensuring that Alaska is a place where everyone feels they belong, and unlocking the power of our brand. In the short term, however, our primary focus is on rebuilding our business to pre-COVID levels and returning to profitable growth. While Q1 results are far below normal levels, it has marked an inflection point during this pandemic, and it appears that we have turned the corner in several key areas that I'll touch on in a moment. Before I dive into results, I want to welcome Constance von Muehlen in her role as Chief Operating Officer for Alaska Airlines succeeding Gary Beck. Constance has been with the company for 10 years and is an incredible leader. I know that she will do a fantastic job in this critical role. Onto the quarter recap, as momentum with vaccines has picked up and travel restrictions have eased, there has been a strong return of leisure demand. We've seen passenger enplanements move from being down 65% in January to down 35% in April. Today's sustained future bookings are roughly 80% of pre-COVID levels. On the strength of these increased bookings and solid cost management against our plan, we posted positive cash flow in March, excluding the impact of the PSP funding. Full quarter operating cash flow, inclusive of funds received under the PSP, was positive $167 million. I'd like to take a moment to thank the employees at Alaska and Horizon for helping us get to this point. They've handled this long downturn with incredible determination to keep our company moving and ready for a strong return of guests. Protecting the health and safety of our guests and employees while also protecting the financial health of our business has only been possible because of the collaborative efforts of our employees and labor leadership. During the quarter, our teams advanced several strategic efforts that are important to shaping our future. First, on March 31, we celebrated our official entry into oneworld. It was the culmination of a year of work by over 400 people across our company, and I want to specifically thank the IT and e-commerce teams for their incredible efforts to make this possible. Many other teams spent months working on this as well, including our crews and frontline teams who are helping guests navigate the changes we've put in place. Second, we received four 737-9 MAX aircraft, and have placed them into operating service. Despite the temporary grounding, which we expect to be resolved in the next week or two, these aircraft have been very well received by our guests and our crews. By the end of 2022, we will have another 39 MAX 9s replacing the Airbus A319s and A320s that were retired from service last year. The MAX has 25% better fuel efficiency, lower maintenance costs, and significant revenue opportunity with its higher gauge. The fuel efficiency of the MAX will also help us reduce our climate impact through lower emissions. On that note, we've recently made new sustainability commitments, particularly focused on climate impact and racial equity. On climate, we announced yesterday our long-term commitment and roadmap to net zero carbon emissions by 2040. We also set near-term goals for 2025 focused on being the most fuel-efficient U.S. airline, building on our culture of efficiency in every part of our system and continuing to electrify our GSE fleet. In February, we announced specific commitments for diversity, equity, and inclusion, including the following goals: ensuring diverse representation of our frontline as reflected in our senior leadership team, cultivating a truly inclusive culture, and continuing to support education as a critical element of equity. We know we have not done enough in this area in the last 10 years and that we still have a lot of work ahead of us, but we're committed to making Alaska a place in which everyone feels they belong and can be their best. To underscore the importance of our climate and DEI commitments, we've tied a portion of executive at-risk pay to achieve our diversity goals, and our climate-related goals are part of our performance-based pay program that every employee participates in. As we look to the remainder of the year and beyond, we are focused on several important areas. First, maintaining balance sheet strength. Our adjusted net debt today is $1.6 billion, down from $1.7 billion at the end of 2019. As we bring capacity and costs back online, we will also prioritize reducing debt levels in the back half of the year. To the extent the recovery is choppy or decelerates, we know having a strong balance sheet will provide foundational strength. Second, we are focused on returning capacity at a deliberate and responsible rate. As we laid out last year, we will fly 80% of 2019 levels this summer. We plan to return to 100% no later than the summer of 2022. This trajectory is consistent with our preference to seek higher load factors than we're seeing today and allows us to make progress with pilot transition training to a mostly all-Boeing fleet. Third, we are developing a roadmap back to profitability. Our fleet plan and cost restructuring program are essential pieces of this roadmap. Our recent entry into oneworld will be instrumental, and we look forward to sharing a framework for the commercial contribution it will bring as we return to our pre-COVID size. In our forecast today, Q2 is approaching P&L breakeven, and we anticipate turning profitable in Q3. It’s worth reminding that nearly 50% of our traffic and revenues touch California on a pre-COVID basis, and California remains largely closed today. Seeing the state reopen will be a powerful near-term enabler for our path back. As we manage these three important aspects of our business, we're cognizant that we may be faced with reasons to modify our plans. Let me state unequivocally that we have the balance sheet, cost structure, and cash on hand to adjust our capacity trajectory and will do so if conditions merit. For example, if we saw more robust demand or an acceleration of the business recovery, we will adapt. The same is true if we see competitive threats to our network or future growth. Turning the momentum we're experiencing today into earnings over the long term is imperative. The work we are focused on, and this quarter's results are steps in the right direction. I truly believe Alaska is well-positioned for the future. And with that, I'll pass it to Andrew, who I know you've missed hearing from in the last few quarters.
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Thanks, Ben, and good morning, everyone. It is great to be back speaking with you about the commercial side of our business. Although we've still got a long climb ahead, the momentum that we've seen in the past few months is really exciting as we've started to see demand return. First quarter revenues came in at $797 million, down 57.5% from the year over two. We also saw a sequential improvement in each month of the quarter, with January revenues down 63%, February down 59%, and March down 52%. Passenger enplanements followed a similar trend. Our first-class cabin performed particularly well, with revenues down 42% for March, which was 10 points better than the system average, due to low fares resulting in high load factors being the main drivers. Overall, our revenue results looked to be among the strongest in the industry, despite California demand remaining seriously impaired. To provide perspective on this, the 54% reduction in California bookings during the first quarter versus 2019 was down nearly two times that of the non-California system average. We expect California to experience a step change in performance by mid-June, which is when the governor has targeted to fully open California's economy. Capacity was 33% below 2019 levels, which was three points worse than we expected. This was primarily caused by cancellations from a severe winter storm across the Pacific Northwest over President's Day holiday. For the quarter, our load factor was 52%, which is up seven points from Q4 on nine points more capacity, aided by a move to unblock middle seats beginning in January. This has been really helpful as demand returns. In March, 41% of our mainline departures carried over and above what our load factor caps would have allowed if middle seat blocks remained in place. Taking a look at the quarter, load factor accelerated from 42% in January to 49% in February and to 62% in March. Notwithstanding, we added 20,000 more daily seats in March compared to January. This momentum has continued into April, where we expect to get close to a 70% load factor. May is also building at a higher rate than April was at this same time last month. Turning to bookings, recent data indicates enplanement trends should continue to improve. We began the quarter in January with an average of around 60,000 bookings a day, or about 43% of 2019 levels. Bookings stepped to approximately 60% of 2019 levels in February, and then 75% in March. The sequential improvement in year-over-two-year bookings trends has continued into April. With demand and passenger enplanements up as much as we're seeing and the opening of middle seats, I want to highlight that our Alaska Listens survey for the first quarter continued to show over 80% of guests give us an excellent or very good rating on health and safety. Additionally, our customer satisfaction scores remained higher than they were pre-pandemic. I'd like to personally thank our frontline and crews for making this happen and ensuring our guests feel safe and comfortable, even though loads have been increasing and we no longer block middle seats in the main cabin. Touching briefly on pricing, yields were 11% below 2019 levels this quarter, in part because of the promotional efforts that we used to stimulate demand for January and February, which are traditionally our weakest months of the year; the pandemic making them especially so. Price volatility is likely an issue we will continue to face in this recovery. As we look towards summer, we are seeing yields improving with demand. While our bias is towards flying full planes, we are clear-eyed about the need to increase yields as we navigate back to our pre-COVID size. A bright spot during the last year has been our loyalty program. Total mileage plan revenues were down just 32% during the quarter, and cash brought in from the bank to compensate us for miles earned on our card surpassed 2019 levels in March. Credit card holders also showed modest growth since the end of 2020, increasing by about 0.5 points. As we see demand return, our teams have started to focus more acutely on the commercial opportunities in front of us. We are picking up from where we left off in 2019 if you will. Three immediate opportunities for 2021 and beyond have already been put in place. Firstly, tapping into the unique benefits around American and oneworld alliances; the increased breadth and depth that we can offer guests is the next level, creating value from both a network revenue and loyalty revenue perspective. Secondly, the implementation of a new RM system, including fare classes that align with our oneworld partners and afford us additional selling classes in the premium cabin. And then thirdly, greater access to managed corporate accounts, as we now provide much greater utility with our domestic partnership with American and our global partners with oneworld loyalty benefits. We finally resolved a long-time issue for our corporate guests by now having a seamless global program in place. As we look forward, we believe the continuation of the return of demand supports our plans to add back capacity in our strongest hubs in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska, then ultimately California as it begins to relax restrictions. Business travel remains severely depressed during the quarter, and our quarterly surveys of corporate customers reinforced our belief that business travel will ramp to about 50% of normal levels by the end of this year. That said, we've seen a 4.6 point improvement in our share gap year-over-two-year in the first two months of this year for our managed corporate accounts. Consistent with all I've shared, we remain committed to flying approximately 80% of 2019 levels in the second quarter, and total revenues are expected to be down 32% to down 37% versus 2019. For the second quarter, we expect the load factor to be between 70% and 75%. While this pandemic has thrown a litany of challenges our way, I do believe that as vaccines continue to roll out, which has resulted in demand being less and less impacted by case counts, we have line of sight to rebuilding our business. Our network, product, fares, loyalty program, and commitment to guest service and care are all configured to bring us out of this even stronger than we went in. And with that, I’ll pass it over to Shane.
Shane Tackett, CFO
Thanks, Andrew, and good morning, everyone. Today, I will touch on our cash flows, liquidity, our balance sheet, as well as costs and expectations for the second quarter. This quarter felt very much like a turning point away from purely trying to survive and toward rebuilding our business, bringing people in, flying back, and beginning to chart a path back to profits and growth. While we reported an adjusted net loss this quarter of $436 million, we were able to generate positive GAAP operating cash flows for the quarter and positive adjusted cash flows in March, even excluding CARES payroll support grants. Our air traffic liability increased by $224 million or 21%, reflecting the step-change improvement in demand the industry is currently seeing. Travel credits now represent 37% of our ATL, down from 53% at year-end. We exited the quarter with an improved adjusted net debt result, which was down from $1.7 billion at the end of 2020 to just under $1.6 billion. Our debt to cap increased only one point to 62%, which we believe will be the high watermark for our debt to cap metrics, and that we will see it reduce from here. We also continue to hold $3.5 billion in on-hand liquidity. Given booking trends and our balance sheet health, I anticipate that we will begin reducing our cash balance by retiring debt during the second half of the year, also ultimately moving towards on-hand liquidity in the range of $2 billion to $2.5 billion. Having heard from Andrew about the commercial progress we saw in the quarter, let me turn to cost performance. We had several areas of good performance and some that we need to drive more improvement in. Adjusted non-fuel operating expenses were $1.14 billion, an increase of $43 million or 3.9% sequentially versus Q4 2020, while capacity increased 8%. As mentioned, for the quarter we saw strong cost performance in several areas of the business, as we beat the cost plan we set out for our divisions. Areas of particular strength included overhead spending, productivity in our airport ramp and aircraft mechanic groups, further progress against long-term structural cost savings, and regional flying unit costs, which were nearly flat year-over-two with especially solid cost performance at Horizon. As we bring back capacity further, we now need to work on improving our crew productivity, which is challenged by recall training, our fleet transition, and flying that is not balanced by crew base relative to our pre-COVID schedule. Speaking of recalls for a second, we were able to welcome 1,500 additional employees back from leave this quarter. We're excited to have our employees back and appreciate what they've done to support the company and their colleagues during the worst of the most uncertain periods of the downturn. A primary area of cost headwind right now is airport costs, as a material share of these costs are not variable with volume. In Q1, airport costs were down just 2.6% on 27% fewer departure volumes, and we continue to see pressure in this area in Q2. Airport leaders were great partnering with the industry last year to manage these costs down, and given they have received additional funds under the American Rescue Plan Act, we are anxious to work with them to use these funds to offset costs again in 2021, as they were able to in 2020. In Seattle, specifically, we have a unique $30 million cost headwind versus 2019 related to the sunsetting of a lease provision that previously provided for sharing concession revenues as part of the lease agreement that carriers agreed to in 2018. I also want to share some additional context on two other costs categories: maintenance expense and variable pay expenses. Regarding maintenance, we are not actively deferring maintenance on our operating fleets, and today, we are operating our entire regional and our entire Boeing fleet. Due to this, we won't have a pent-up maintenance backlog going forward, and as such, we expect relatively smooth maintenance costs through the year. Lastly, more as a reminder than anything, we continue to utilize our longstanding performance-based pay program to align employees on the goals that are key to our short and long-term success. I believe we may be the only airline right now with continued incentive pay accruals. In the quarter, we accrued $33.5 million for our monthly operational goals program and a potential payout under the annual PBP plan early next year. Looking ahead, we expect continued sequential unit cost improvement with an increase in Q2 of 15% to 17% versus 2019. As I just mentioned, our cost forecast includes an assumption that employees will continue to earn a payout under the performance-based pay program, and it also includes the three-point headwind specific to Seattle’s airport costs. We expect the sequential improvement versus 2019 to continue throughout the year as more capacity comes back and as we make gain towards the structural cost initiatives we've outlined in previous calls. We do expect to return to pre-COVID unit costs or better at some point in the next several quarters. Lastly, on guidance, I expect Q2 GAAP operating cash flow will be approximately $450 million to $550 million, which reflects an improvement of $200 million to $300 million versus Q1, solely associated with the recovery of the business. This guidance is inclusive of the grant portion of the third CARES Act PSP program. To close, we are proud of the work our Alaska and Horizon teams did this past year to manage through the worst depths of the pandemic-induced crisis, and we are now hopeful that we can completely focus from here forward on rebuilding our network and our margin profiles, then growing and returning to balanced capital allocation. We are fortunate to be well-positioned coming into the initial part of recovery. We have a strong balance sheet that should continue to improve throughout the year. We have a competitive advantage in our cost structure that we will continue to work to improve over this year and next. We are on the path to get all of our folks back ready to welcome guests as they get flying again. With that, let's turn to your questions.
Operator, Operator
And our first question will come from Andrew Didora with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Andrew Didora, Analyst
Hi, good morning everyone, and thanks for the questions. This first question is for Andrew. I wanted to touch on Hawaii. It is clearly a market that's opening. It's all leisure. What percentage of your ASMs will be here in 2021? And do you think it will have better, worse, or the same margins relative to the system compared to pre-pandemic?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Hey, Andrew, I'm not going to comment on margins, but Hawaii for the next little bit here gets about 15% of our capacity. What we have seen is that, and the same with Mexico a little bit, is that the testing and all the requirements they have seem to be working fairly smoothly. So, demand in Hawaii is solid.
Andrew Didora, Analyst
And how do you see the competitive response on those Hawaii routes?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
I'm not, as far as competitive response specifically, what are you referring to?
Andrew Didora, Analyst
Is it competitive capacity?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
I see. Well, from where we sit and our loyalty, we've been very good. We think by this summer, we'll be up to our pre-pandemic frequencies of about 32 a day, and given where we focus our flying, we feel very good about the seats, and it's performing well.
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Hi, Andrew, this is Ben. I think we have the perfect product for Hawaii to compete. We've got a strong first-class product. We have a premium product that people love, a generous main cabin with great service, and we're starting to bring our product back. So we have the perfect product to compete on our Hawaii routes.
Andrew Didora, Analyst
Okay. And just secondly for Shane. I know in the past, Alaska has hedged fuel a bit more from using call options as insurance. Do you have any hedges on right now? And are there any internal discussions on maybe stepping that back up today given where fuel has gone? Thanks.
Shane Tackett, CFO
Andrew, good to talk to you. Yes, we never did anything different with our hedging program throughout the pandemic. We were over-hedged last year, obviously, as capacity came way down, and we had already put a lot of positions on for last year. I think right now we're back to our normal cadence, about 18 months in advance of the quarter. We start layering on hedges up to about 50% of expected consumption, 20% out of the money. That's what we've done for the past several years. Strangely enough, we did ask ourselves whether we should change our program or do something differently. Just in the past several weeks, all the data that we looked at suggests that we really like our program as it is and we don't plan to change it from here forward.
Andrew Didora, Analyst
That's great. Thank you.
Shane Tackett, CFO
Thanks, Andrew.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Myles Walton with UBS. Please go ahead.
Myles Walton, Analyst
Thanks, good morning. So hoping you could just touch on the California reopening? And I know it's only going to capture a little bit of the June quarter. But as you look to the booking trends in July and August, are you seeing the population moving in advance or are they kind of sitting on their hands waiting for final confirmation? Moreover, what does this imply about what you're going to do with the network into Q3?
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Yes, thanks, Myles. I think California is slowly coming back. We're obviously seeing an improvement in bookings. We feel pretty good about the way we've structured our network. About a fifth of our ASMs in the second quarter will be in California, and we're still going to be down 50% in capacity. So, we have plenty of room on the airplanes. We're just seeing increasing trends, but come June will be the real telltale about how big that step change is.
Myles Walton, Analyst
And one quick…
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Go ahead.
Myles Walton, Analyst
One quick one on loyalty. You mentioned that oneworld, you're going to lay out an economic framework or contribution framework at a future date, but given you planted a seed, I'll ask you to water a little. Can you comment on how much of that economic contribution framework will be indirectly or directly through loyalty versus through the network? Thanks.
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Yes, we're going to comment on that at a later date. Obviously, international travel is basically next to nothing; however, both domestic and international, and I think overall, certainly on the loyalty side, you're going to see that as a very, very strong area for us. Corporate business is another very strong area for us. Then, of course, the incremental network passengers from international, and of course just our joint domestic partnership with American as well. So, good things there.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Savi Syth with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Savi Syth, Analyst
Hey, good morning everyone. Prior to the crisis, you were working on getting pre-tax margins to 13% to 15%. I wonder if you could provide an update on your ability to get there eventually, especially if business demand isn't going to fully recover to pre-crisis levels in 2022 or 2023?
Shane Tackett, CFO
Thanks, Savi. These are some questions to talk about future profit margins that reflect sort of pre-COVID level. We have a roadmap back to profitability. As you know, we previously said 10% as a minimum threshold, and we've talked a lot about 13% to 15% as a normal level that we think is appropriate in the industry. To the degree that the economic backdrop supports those levels, we certainly expect to be one of the top margin players in the industry, and we do want to get back into that range. I think it's a little early to talk about when that could happen, and if it's clearly going to happen. I keep thinking we'd like to get through this initial pent-up demand surge into the back half of the year to see where business travel kind of shapes up to your point. Then, we'll have a better picture of ultimately where margins may shake out. But we're not abandoning that goal at all. We think long-term it's a place the industry could, can, and should be, and we should be among the leaders from a margin perspective.
Savi Syth, Analyst
That's helpful, Shane. And maybe if I can follow up just a little bit on your comment about getting back to that. But getting to a $2 billion to $2.5 billion liquidity target, just wondering where the logic behind that level versus something else?
Shane Tackett, CFO
Yes, it's a little bit of judgment and instinct. If there was another unexpected big step back, we don't want to be scrambling. We've been talking a lot about this. If cash flow generation continues to improve in Q3 and Q4 and advanced bookings are good, then some business travel comes back, we could see ourselves going on the lower end of that. I think what we've committed to internally right now is no lower than $2 billion coming out of this year. We have a big capital commitment next year, and so we want to be mindful of that as well, Savi. But we're well above our normal need for cash right now. I don't know if we'll ultimately go back to $1.2 to $1.5 billion. That's something that I think we’ll be thinking about and making decisions about in the next six months or so.
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Thanks, Savi.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Joseph DeNardi with Stifel. Please go ahead.
Joseph DeNardi, Analyst
Hello, thanks, guys. Good morning. Andrew, how effective is Alaska at monetizing customers outside of the airplane? You all are obviously pretty effective with Bank of America. I'm curious what you think the opportunity is beyond the co-brand partnership?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Yes, you're talking about really merchandising and up-selling that type of thing? We've been doing a lot of work on the digital side on our site. We become experts in promotions over the last six months, and the team is getting very sophisticated on how we go about doing that on the programs we do. We also have other things like the premium class, which is going to become a cabin just like first-class, and we see opportunity there. Our first-class product now is what we call J Class, which historically it was F. I think corporate customers are going to have greater access. We’re working on a number of things, and as I've shared in this script, we'll lay more of this out as we move deeper into the year, but we have a lot of revenue upside benefits outside the core coupon ticket that we're working on.
Joseph DeNardi, Analyst
Okay. And then, Ben, you mentioned one of the strategic priorities is maximizing the value of the brand. I think is what you said that piqued my interest shockingly. So, what did you mean by that? Thank you.
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Yes, no, I appreciate it, Joe. Look, I'm a big believer in Alaska. If you look at the strength we have in the Pacific Northwest and the state of Alaska and the loyalty and love for our brand, I just think there is huge potential in unlocking this brand more than we have in California and across the country. This brand is powerful; when people get to know it, when people fly us, they love us, and they love our people who do a wonderful job every day. I just think there is a lot this brand can offer once people get to know it more.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from Duane Pfennigwerth with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.
Duane Pfennigwerth, Analyst
Hey, thanks. Shane, you talked about some accruals, I think for hitting your operational target as well as maybe some profit sharing. What are the circumstances under which you would be paying for profit sharing early next year?
Shane Tackett, CFO
Hey, Duane. Good to hear from you. Yes, our PPP plan always has multiple components; profit is the typically largest. We don't expect honestly to pay out under that particular metric. We didn't change the threshold target or max, so we would have to hit a full year pre-tax margin of 5% to pay out for profits. We also have operating cash flow goals in the program this year. We've got carbon reduction goals. We've got cost-related goals around productivity and safety goals. The company is doing a really good job against each one of those right now. These are the potential areas where we see a potential payout.
Duane Pfennigwerth, Analyst
That's great. I wanted to make sure I wasn't reading too far into it. Is there anything you're seeing on a revenue basis that's up at this point relative to 2019 across the network? I wondered if you could talk about bookings into the state of Alaska?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Yes, thanks, Duane. The network is obviously stronger in some areas and others. We're not at prior pre-pandemic load factors. We have a couple of regions now that are into the 80%, but the fares and the yields are not where they were back in 2019. Overall across our network, revenues are building. In the state of Alaska, there is obviously incremental capacity coming in this summer, but we feel really good about our network for this summer, and we love our brand and we've been marketing it well. So we see Alaska being a good story this summer for us.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Helane Becker with Cowen. Please go ahead.
Helane Becker, Analyst
Thanks very much, operator. Hi, everybody. Thanks for the time. Two questions. I'm wondering if you could tell us how you're going to measure the carbon goals for your profit sharing? How should we track that, or how are you – actually more importantly, how are you tracking that?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
The climate goal is really important, Helane. We have two short-term goals. The long-term goal is to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2040. The short-term goal is to be the most fuel-efficient airline in the next five years. As Shane was referring, we've tied our performance-based pay program where we're going to measure carbon impact per ASM. That's how we're going to measure that short-term goal, and every employee in the company will be measured on that.
Diana Birkett Rakow, SVP of Public Affairs and Sustainability
I would like to clarify – Helane, you asked about the PPP goal in our employee-based pay plan, which is, as Ben said, pounds of CO2 per ASM.
Helane Becker, Analyst
Right. Exactly. I'm just trying to figure out how you're going to measure that. So that's the answer, right, pounds of CO2 per ASM, and the goal is to just lower it?
Diana Birkett Rakow, SVP of Public Affairs and Sustainability
Yes, and it's based on fuel use. We set a target based on our budgeted ASMs and our budgeted fuel use, and we aim to reduce carbon emissions year-over-year from what we would predict would be flat.
Helane Becker, Analyst
Okay. That's very helpful. Thank you. I'm wondering if, completely unrelated to the environment, Andrew, could you do like a bridge to how you're thinking about raising yields? I know it's, you know, in part, based on demand, but how are you, given the lag between bookings and pricing, how should we think about fares trending this summer, and a bridge from maybe where you are to where you want to be, which would be say pre-pandemic levels?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Sure. Yes, a couple of things on yield affect this, Helane. You can push yield up with more volumes of business travel, and to date, that's really significantly down. You can push yield up when flights get full. We've built our base with bookings that were during a really low booking period and stimulus in getting a good base. As we move forward into the second quarter and certainly into the third quarter, we're bringing in new traffic, and you've heard others comment, and it's the same for us too that the yield and average fares coming in for summer right now for our peak flights are actually higher than 2019. So I think you're going to see a sure but stable climb, but a lot of this is dependent on business traffic, and of course capacity. We all know what everyone's flying in May, and we sort of see June. Beyond that, we haven't seen proper load schedules, and that will also dictate what happens with yields.
Helane Becker, Analyst
Great, thanks very much, Andrew. Thanks, team.
Ben Minicucci, CEO
Thanks, Helane.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Jamie Baker with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Jamie Baker, Analyst
Hey, good afternoon, everybody. Can you be a little bit more specific about the milestones you need to achieve before you begin returning capital to shareholders? Obviously, acknowledging the PSP restrictions that are in place. Just wondering what internal metrics or milestones you're looking for.
Nat Pieper, SVP of Fleet and Finance
Hey, Jamie, it's Nat Pieper. We're proud – we didn't issue equity or dilute our shareholders to raise funds through the pandemic. We want to restart shareholder returns as soon as it makes sense. Like most things here, we have a checklist to complete before doing so, and these items won't be a surprise for you: balance sheet strength, getting the debt-to-cap back in its target levels, positive cash flow, and sustained profitability. Really, once Ben and our Board gives us an A on the checklist, I anticipate re-engagement in that area. You're right that we've got government restrictions on both buybacks and dividends until September of 2022 due to the PSP triumvirate. We'll balance that too.
Jamie Baker, Analyst
Okay. That's helpful. I appreciate it. Your comments earlier about first-class yield momentum, I found that interesting. The Transcon premium market continues to improve from a passenger perspective. You've got Delta 764s now flying with what I call a pseudo suite product, and Mint is getting a refresh. Is there anything happening in the premium Transcon market that might make you revisit your decision to exit, or are you still happier than ever with that decision?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
I think you're referring to maybe lie-flat seats. Here's what I'll tell you about our first-class cabin. Our product is made for the conditions that we have today. We have 12 and 16 seats, the largest pitch for non-lie-flat seats in the industry. We've been focusing on selling demand into those seats. Hawaii has been a very strong point for us. Even in May, our capacity is down 70% because the demand is not there right now. We're seeing first-class perform well on our Hawaii flights and on our north/south flights and that sort of thing. It's just been the perfect product, and people are willing to buy up right now.
Shane Tackett, CFO
Jamie, this is Shane. On the actual, no, we're totally happy with our decision not to have moved into that market. It makes sense for certain carriers to do it. It didn't make sense for us. We'd have to sell three quarters of those $1,000 or better. It's just not the model we have. We don't really like selling $1,000 fares; we like to make a lot of money selling lower fares. So we're feeling very good about our decision.
Jamie Baker, Analyst
All right, strong answers on both topics. Thanks, gentlemen. Take care.
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Thanks, Jamie.
Shane Tackett, CFO
Thanks, Jamie.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Catherine O'Brien with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
Hey everyone. Thanks for the time. I think my first one is probably for Shane. On your CapEx outlook, I just wanted to confirm that $150 million to $200 million is gross CapEx, and that's not net of any financing on aircraft from Alaska's order book. Based on the deposits Boeing already has from Alaska, I'm guessing some negotiations around the purchase price, given the MAX grounding and your new order, when do you work through those deposits, and what will CapEx look like over the next couple of years?
Shane Tackett, CFO
Yes, thanks, Katie. I'm going to have Nat help out on this, but I'll answer the hard one first: Yes, it's gross CapEx, it's not net. I’ll give this one to Nat.
Nat Pieper, SVP of Fleet and Finance
Awesome, delegation. I think in this year with that PDP balance and Katie, as we talked about in the previous quarter when we made that order, all of our 2021 obligations related to it are taken care of. Very little, if any cash out for 2021 airplanes. In 2022, we've been public with a CapEx number of $1.3 billion or $1.4 billion, and that's 31 airplanes coming in 2022. We have, as part of our negotiation with Boeing restructured our PDP pool a bit. We'll be using that leverage appropriately as well. We're comfortable with where that sits, and even though that is a big requirement in 2022, we can achieve that and still get our balance sheet strength back to the levels that we want to retain.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
Got it. And then maybe one for Andrew, it sounds like there's definitely more to come on this, but a question on American and oneworld partnerships. Just like a higher-level theoretical question: As international and corporate ultimately start to recover and you potentially see your corporate share improve, a couple of some of the new RM changes you also spoke about, should we expect Alaska to just be a higher yield carrier ultimately post-COVID versus pre-COVID, kind of assuming maybe all else equal on the leisure side of the business, just for ease of this question?
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Yes. Thanks, Katie. My view is absolutely yes. Given the things that have been put in place that give us access on the corporate side, I do believe that our share will grow, even as I said already, seen even on low numbers in that first part of this year that will attract high-yielding traffic as business demand returns.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
Great. Thanks.
Shane Tackett, CFO
Thanks, Katie.
Operator, Operator
Your next question will come from Hunter Keay with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Hunter Keay, Analyst
Hey, good morning, everybody. Last June, you made a prediction that 2021 revenue would be down 20% to 35%, which was actually a remarkably good guess. I don't know how you did that, but given your track record, as you look at 2022, do you think it will be up relative to 2019?
Ben Minicucci, CEO
What I'll say, it's all an ops background, Hunter, that helps me with the financials. You know what, Hunter, we try to be realistic with what we see. As we look into this fall, it's hard to see what's exactly going to happen, but we can make some solid predictions. We know leisure demand is coming back for us pretty much at 100%. We're at 25% of business right now; we will probably see a step change in business demand by the end of the year, as the vaccines roll out and businesses relax the restrictions. So that should double; it should be 50% is what we're predicting for business demand by the end of the year. We should see it much higher than the first and second quarter. So we should be getting close to where we were in 2022. I'm not going to give you a number, but we feel good about 2022, and we're trying to set up ourselves in 2021 just to solidify that road back to profitability, get all this transition training done so that we can fire on all cylinders in 2022.
Hunter Keay, Analyst
Okay. And then, Shane, just to follow up on Jamie's question a little bit. You talked about balanced capital allocation. How do you think that term is going to change from pre-COVID to post-COVID? Is it rather than paying some nominal dividend? Is it maybe, hey, this makes more sense to think about investing in the product a little bit more post-COVID, or doubling down on the repurchase, or just paying down debt? How does the term balance capital allocation change in two years relative to what it was in 2018, 2019?
Shane Tackett, CFO
Thanks Hunter. These are – I really love your questions. You guys usually prompt us to go back and think about things a little bit more. This isn't something that is off the cuff. So I want you to know that. I don't – I'm guessing it's going to be a tweak more than an overhaul. Our basic approach historically has been get the balance sheet to our target range and then make sure we're growing at an appropriate rate, 4% to 8% annually. Then, fund pensions robustly, and then make sure we're returning to shareholders. We liked the setup where we had a dividend and then topped off with share repurchases. That's our default as we go forward. I know it's not sexy or something because it's not exotic. I do get the question that certain areas of the business coming out of COVID we'll see if the market and expectations changed from a customer perspective. Certainly, things around cleanliness and feeling of safety, we're making investments in. Now, those are things that we've been doing this past year, and they'll stick with us. I don't really view that necessarily as capital allocation, but I think it will – our mindset is mostly returning to where we were before. We'll adjust as we learn things going forward. That's kind of where my head is at on that right now.
Hunter Keay, Analyst
No, that's great. Helpful. Thank you, everybody.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Mike Linenberg with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Mike Linenberg, Analyst
Hey, good morning, everyone. I guess, just two here. One, Shane, where are we on the secured loan with the CARES Act? The second one, I may have missed it but I know you had drawn down a piece and there was like another $1.7 billion. What's the status on that?
Shane Tackett, CFO
You've got it right, Mike. I don’t know how you keep all this straight. We had to take a portion of that loan down by law initially about $135 million that remains outstanding. We have access to another $1.7 billion through May. I don't see really any scenario where we'll tap our access to that $1.7 billion, but we have until May, so we haven't formally made a decision on that quite yet.
Mike Linenberg, Analyst
Which leads me to ask – I think the plan was that loyalty would feature into something along those lines. If you don't tap it, are you still considering loyalty, or maybe I can answer the question that it sounds like you're done with everything on the financing side. Is that right?
Shane Tackett, CFO
You got it.
Andrew Harrison, Chief Commercial Officer
Yes.
Operator, Operator
The next question will come from Andrew Didora with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Andrew Didora, Analyst
Hi, good morning everyone, and thanks for the questions. Just a question for Andrew. Wanted to touch on Hawaii. It is clearly a market that's opening. It's all leisure. What percentage of your ASMs will be here in 2021? And do you think it will have better, worse, or the same margins relative to the system compared to pre-pandemic?
Emily Halverson, Managing Director of Investor Relations
Thank you, everyone for joining us. If you have any other questions, please reach out to our IR folks. Have a great day, and we'll talk to you next quarter.
Operator, Operator
Thank you for participating in today's conference call. This call will be available for future playback at alaskaair.com. Ladies and gentlemen, you may now disconnect.