Earnings Call Transcript
Skywest Inc (SKYW)
Earnings Call Transcript - SKYW Q3 2021
Operator, Operator
Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the SkyWest, Inc. Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants' lines are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. Please be advised, that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Tina and thanks, everyone, for joining us on the call today. As Tina indicated, this is Rob Simmons, SkyWest's Chief Financial Officer. On the call with me today are Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer; Wade Steel, Chief Commercial Officer; and Eric Woodward, Chief Accounting Officer. I'd like to start today by asking Eric to read the safe harbor. Then I will turn the time over to Chip for some comments. Following Chip, I will take us through the financial results, then Wade will discuss the fleet and related flying arrangements. Following Wade, we will have the customary Q&A session with our sell-side analysts. Eric?
Eric Woodward, Chief Accounting Officer
Today's discussion contains forward-looking statements that represent our current beliefs, expectations and assumptions regarding future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties. We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statement. Actual results will likely vary and may vary materially from those anticipated, estimated or projected for a number of reasons. Some of the factors that may cause such differences are included in our 2020 Form 10-K and other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. And now, I'll turn the call over to Chip.
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Rob and Eric. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us on the call today. The third quarter is typically our busiest flying season, and this year is no exception despite what continues to be a somewhat bumpy recovery for our industry. While we continue to navigate the evolving COVID-19 situation and its impacts, our fleet remains critical to the industry's recovery and demand for our product is very strong. Throughout this challenging period, we've remained focused on several key priorities. First, to take care of our people. Second, to remain agile to deliver on our partners' needs. And third, to provide a solid product while minimizing the risk and preserving our liquidity. Recapping our third quarter results, we reported pretax income of $14 million and net income of $10 million. These results include our final quarter of payroll support program grants and partner revenue concessions. We took delivery of six new E175s for our American operation during the quarter. These are the first of this fleet type that we will operate for American and we look forward to placing them into contract flying early next year. As previously announced, we have secured an agreement with Delta for 16 additional E175s which will also be arriving next year along with nine E175s for Alaska. This will be a combined total of 45 new E175s going into service over the next 1.5 years. These agreements reflect the current work we're doing to help lead the recovery as well as the importance of the dual-class fleet in that effort. Overall, these new E175s help us make meaningful progress toward our fleet transition by adding dual-class aircraft, enhancing fleet flexibility and mitigating risk over the next couple of years. We continue to prepare and invest for the long term, and this includes building reliability into our existing fleet. Maintenance costs associated with investment remain elevated and the volume and duration of maintenance events are much higher than they've been historically. We expect these costs to plateau this year and will settle back to a new level next year. We've also strategically embedded flexibility into our prorate model to allow for the flex up and down of our prorate flying relative to the demand and partner need. While prorate is slightly profitable in the quarter, we continue to exercise flexibility in that model to ensure that our resources are allocated toward the best economic opportunity. Our strong balance sheet and cash position remain key differentiators for SkyWest. We are working across all areas of the operation to ensure we're continually adapting to the changing climate and responding to what our partners need from us and operational performance remains a focus. Despite the clear difficulties associated with an uneven recovery, we achieved a 99.8% adjusted completion for the third quarter with nearly 73,000 more scheduled flights from the same quarter last year. I again want to thank our incredible team of professionals who continue to demonstrate flexibility, teamwork, and dedication to delivering a solid product in any situation. Last Thursday, we experienced an IT server disruption that affected our operations. Its impact was compounded by the size of our operation and the currents during one of our busiest times of the day. Our analysis of this event is extensive and ongoing to make sure we prevent a reoccurrence in the future. After the system was restored, it took us some time to get crews and planes back in place. This was an inexcusable event and I want to thank our many teams across the operation, who sprang into action the moment the system was restored to reposition aircraft and crews and to help re-accommodate customers following the outage. There are many reports of SkyWest people from all work groups going above and beyond. I want to extend a huge thank you to our remarkable team of 14,000 professionals on the front lines who stepped up in a big way to take care of customers and each other. Working together with our people to successfully navigate this dynamic environment remains a top priority at SkyWest. We have several programs in place to minimize the impacts of COVID-19 and to strongly encourage vaccination without implementing what has been a divisive mandate nationwide. This includes paid time off incentives for employees who report full vaccination. We've also been providing COVID testing programs in certain areas of the operation for well over a year now. We also required daily health assessments and masks across the operation and are procuring additional kits for testing. With this approach, we enjoy the highest vaccination rate in the regional industry. We are evaluating how the executive order on vaccination may affect us and we are committed to working with our people to support their ability to choose as well as to protect their health and the health of our colleagues and customers. SkyWest is fortunate to enjoy and attract and retain exceptional professionals across our operation. While we maintain a robust hiring pipeline and strategy for all work groups, we have pilot classes filled well into 2022. We are focused on staying proactive and continuing to attract the best professionals as we navigate through the end of this pandemic and beyond. In summary, while there is clearly work ahead and 2022 looks to be a pandemic transition year, demand for our product remains strong and we are confident our fleet will continue to fill a critical role in the return to travel. We are focused on remaining aggressive and deliberate to take care of our people and our customers as we preserve our liquidity and execute on the recovery to emerge as a better, stronger business. Rob will now take us through the financial data.
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Today, we reported third quarter GAAP net income of $10 million or $0.19 diluted earnings per share. Adjusted net income for the third quarter was $74 million or $1.45 diluted earnings per share. Q3 pretax income was $14 million on a GAAP basis and $99 million on an adjusted basis. As outlined in the release, our adjusted income excludes a noncash impairment charge of $85 million before tax on our CRJ900 fleet that I will discuss further momentarily. Our diluted share count for Q3 was 50.7 million shares and our effective tax rate in Q3 was 31.9%. First, let's talk about revenue. Total Q3 revenue of $745 million is up 63% from Q3 2020 and is up 13% from last quarter. Q3 2021 revenue is only down 2% from Q3 2019 as the recovery continues. Our Q3 block hour production was up 14% sequentially from Q2 compared to the 13% sequential increase in revenue. Q3 revenue breaks down with contract revenue up 54% from Q3 2020 and up 12% from Q2. We have temporary partner revenue concessions impacting Q1, Q2, and Q3 of 2021 and in Q3 2020 for comparative purposes. Q3 was likely the last quarter with temporary revenue concessions. Prorate revenue was $128 million in Q3, up 111% year-over-year and up 24% from last quarter. Leasing and other revenue is up 107% year-over-year and 7% sequentially. These GAAP results include the effect of the release of $19 million of deferred revenue this quarter compared to $6 million deferred during Q2 and $30 million deferred in Q3 in '20. As of the end of Q3, we have $118 million of cumulative deferred revenue that will be recognized in future periods. As discussed last quarter, the timing and amount of future deferrals or reversals into revenue depends on the shape and cadence of the recovery of our flying. All deferred revenue will be reversed into revenue by the end of the various contract periods. Transitioning to our operating expenses. During Q3, $115 million in PSP grants was recognized as income in the form of a contra expense in our P&L. This compares to grant income of $193 million recognized in Q1 and $114 million in Q2. We do not expect any additional grant income in Q4 absent any PSP3 top-up amounts. As previously announced in August and highlighted in today's release, we reached an agreement with Delta to place 16 new E175 aircraft under a long-term contract. These E175 aircraft will replace 16 older SkyWest and CRJ900 aircraft we currently operate for Delta. Under this fleet transition, we are scheduled to have 16 displaced CRJ900s in 2022. Given the uncertainty of redeploying these displaced 900s, we reevaluated them for impairment which resulted in a noncash impairment charge of $85 million during the quarter. We expect depreciation expense on these aircraft will continue until the aircraft are removed from the Delta contract. The aggregate remaining debt and lease payment obligations on our financing of CRJ900s following the removal from the Delta contract are scheduled to be only $6 million. Let me move to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with cash of $913 million, down from $956 million last quarter. Our CapEx during the third quarter was $162 million for six new E175 aircraft, one used CRJ700 aircraft, spare engines, and other fixed assets. Our expectation for total 2021 CapEx is approximately $600 million to $620 million, including the purchase of 12 new E175s in the fourth quarter of this year under our previously announced contract with American. This compares to $438 million in CapEx in 2020. We ended Q3 with debt of $3 billion, down from $3.2 billion as of year-end 2020. The only government debt we have on our balance sheet is a total of $201 million in PSP, 10-year unsecured, no amortization, low coupon loans. Let me say a couple of things about liquidity. As of September 30, 2021, our cash position of $913 million included the effect this quarter of having repaid an incremental $107 million of debt before adding $119 million of debt financing for the six new E175s. We also have approximately $1.5 billion of unpledged collateral that could be deployed for additional liquidity if ever needed. As of September 30, 2021, our debt net of cash balance is actually $421 million lower than it was pre-COVID at the end of 2019. Additional flexibility comes from the fact that including partner-owned aircraft, over 50% of our fleet in service now has no financing obligation. Especially in times of great uncertainty like this and consistent with our policy and practice, we are not in a position to give any specific EPS guidance at this time. However, let me give you a little color. First, we expect Q4 earnings to be roughly breakeven to slightly negative. The profit reduction from $99 million in Q3 adjusted pretax earnings to Q4 is comprised of several elements. Q4 is not expected to have any net PSP benefit, no grant income, and no partner concessions. Although our block hour production in Q3 was in a couple of percentage points of Q3 2019 levels, we anticipate some softening in production schedules in Q4. Normal seasonality is expected to lower Q4 results from Q3, similar to pre-COVID patterns. Our prorate business is expected to also soften sequentially from Q3 to Q4. Prorate was only slightly profitable in Q3. Cancellations related to our server outage last week could end up costing us $15 million to $20 million in Q4. Second, we expect to return to 2019 production levels in 2022. 2022 maintenance expense is expected to be lower than 2021 but higher than 2019, but with some positive offsets in revenue. We won't see the full year impact of the 45 accretive new E175 aircraft until 2023, with some impact in 2022. The impact in 2021 of the PSP grants net of partner concessions was a little over $200 million for the year. We're hoping to offset that in 2022 with normal operations. As a result, 2022 earnings may look similar to 2021, excluding the 2021 impairment charge. We believe that the actions we are taking now and expect to take over the next few quarters are setting us up nicely for the new normal in the future.
Wade Steel, Chief Commercial Officer
Thank you, Rob. I'll provide a fleet and production status update as well as an update on our prorate and leasing businesses. To update by partner, during the quarter, we announced an agreement with Delta to add 16 new E175s. We anticipate these aircraft will be placed into service beginning mid-2022 through the first part of 2023. These aircraft will replace 16 older SkyWest-owned CRJ900 aircraft currently operating under contract with Delta. After we take delivery of these aircraft, we will have 87 E175s under long-term contracts with Delta. During the first nine months of 2021, we put 17 CRJ700s into service with American. We still have 19 more CRJ700s to add to our contract, eight during Q4 2021 and 11 during 2023, bringing our American CRJ700 fleet total to 101 by the middle of 2023. The majority of these CRJ700s have been in long-term storage for the past few years and require extensive maintenance work to return to service. Also with American, we have 20 new E175s scheduled for service next year. We received six of those during the third quarter and anticipate receiving 12 more during Q4 and two in the first quarter of next year. Together, these E175s and CRJ700s will bring our total American fleet to 121 by the middle of 2023. Last quarter, we announced an agreement with Alaska to add nine more E175s to our contract. We expect to place eight of those aircraft into service during 2022 and one aircraft during the first half of 2023 for a total of 41 under long-term contracts with Alaska. We've also extended the current fleet of 32 E175s, which puts all of these aircraft under contract with Alaska for the rest of this decade. During the second quarter, we worked with all of our major partners on a third round of contract concessions, which included temporary rate reductions. These concessions are reflected in our third quarter results. All concessions expired at the end of the third quarter. Let me review our current production. During the third quarter, our completed block hours were down by less than 2% compared to the same quarter in 2019. Based on the current schedules we have from our major partners for the fourth quarter of 2021, we anticipate that our block hours will decrease by approximately 5% compared to the third quarter of 2021. As we look forward to 2022, we anticipate that our block hours will be slightly higher than 2019. Let me talk a little about our prorate business, which was slightly profitable in Q3. Prorate revenue for the quarter decreased by 12% or approximately $18 million compared to Q3 2019. For Q4, we anticipate our prorate revenue to decrease by 25% as compared to Q3 2021. This decrease is primarily related to service reductions in several of our prorate cities as higher yield business travel has been slower to return. We have reallocated these block hours to our contract line with higher-margin characteristics. We anticipate that our prorate model will continue to decrease during 2022 as we continue to grow and reallocate block hours to our contract fleet. Shifting gears to our leasing business, we currently have 39 CRJ700s and 900s under long-term leases with third parties. This line of business has very good cash flow and strong margin characteristics. Demand for our engine leasing business is returning and we anticipate placing several engines under long-term leases next year. Next year, we will have 16 CRJ900s that come out of the Delta contract and are currently not placed. We anticipate placing these aircraft in our leasing entity after removal from the Delta contract, where we may pursue leasing opportunities for aircraft or engines. Let me talk briefly about our current maintenance expense, which continues to run above historical norms. This is primarily due to the recovery of our flying and bringing the aircraft for American agreement out of long-term storage. We currently have over 30 lines of heavy maintenance at our third-party providers, and the ramp-up of these suppliers remains slower than anticipated. We anticipate that we will continue maintenance at roughly these levels during the fourth quarter and expect to trend down starting next year to settle at a new normal. As a result of our improved fleet mix, we do not anticipate returning to 2019 maintenance cost levels. For example, we are responsible for engine maintenance on all of our E175s and have placed them under a power-by-the-hour agreement. The engine maintenance expense on the E175s is also reimbursed in our revenue model. We have spent the last several years reducing risk and enhancing fleet and financing flexibility to ensure we're well positioned. We are committed to continuing our work with each of our major partners to provide creative solutions as we work towards full demand recovery.
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Okay. Operator, we're ready for our Q&A now.
Operator, Operator
Our first question is from Savanthi Syth with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Savanthi Syth, Analyst
Good afternoon, everyone. I wanted to start by asking about pilot levels. I'm curious about the current attrition rates. Last quarter, you mentioned they were still below historical averages, but you expected them to rise. What are you seeing now? Additionally, we've heard from some of your partners that they are experiencing staffing challenges in their in-house regions. Are you finding opportunities to assist them with this?
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
Savi, this is Chip. I appreciate the question. First and foremost, I think that with the models that we have been looking at over the past several months, we anticipated higher attrition here in the fall and that has happened. It's been about at the levels that we had thought. Understand our entire process is spending a lot of time and effort on making sure we evaluate what to project out into the future as well as make sure we've got a very strong pipeline. So look, from our perspective, as we said in the script, we've got good full classes, probably as big a robust training pipeline as we've ever had at SkyWest. We're getting good strong professional candidates. But you're right, there's a lot of attractions to the SkyWest pilots. We think we hire the best and we have the best training program in the world. And so that certainly goes into our calculation. Relative to the second part of your question, we are just focused on our own business. We continue to work with our partners on what their needs are. From our perspective, it's a lot about making sure we have the best pilots. We take care of them and give them the good experience that they need here and try to hang on to them. And we'd love to hang on to all of them but we understand how sometimes the math of that model works. So we're optimistic but this is something that we spend a tremendous amount of time watching and predicting nine months out to 18 months as best we can.
Savanthi Syth, Analyst
I would like to get some clarity on the prorate segment. How are the aircraft being reallocated? Are they being put on CPAs or serving as backup spares when necessary? I'm trying to understand the reallocation process better. It seems that the 2022 earnings outlook assumes prorate won't recover or may even be lower than in 2021. Could you provide more details on your perspective regarding that business?
Wade Steel, Chief Commercial Officer
Hello, Savi, this is Wade. To provide some additional insight, our prorate model is quite adaptable. As I mentioned earlier, we've seen a decline in business demand recently, and it hasn't completely recovered yet. In response, we've adjusted by reallocating some pilots and resources to contract models. This allows us to support the contract fleet and increase our flying hours under contract. However, when business demand rebounds, we will have the ability to shift back to our preferred operations. We aim to keep as much flexibility as possible moving forward.
Savanthi Syth, Analyst
Is there any general information on the EPS thinking you've provided or the earnings details shared, specifically regarding what's assumed for prorate?
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Well, I think as Wade said, Savi, as we think of next year and as we said, it's likely fairly similar to the results of this year. That includes recapturing somewhere in the neighborhood of a couple of hundred million dollars of net grant benefits that goes away. I think to Wade's point is that our expectations for prorate, I think, are modest next year.
Mike Linenberg, Analyst
Good afternoon, everyone. I want to revisit the disruption you experienced. In the release, you mentioned it was due to the repercussions of the cyberattack and malware. First, is there any insurance coverage related to this, or was it an error on your part? Also, during this situation, there was a lot of information circulating on blogs, and I’m trying to understand the actual timeline. Did the incident occur during the day of the migration, or was it overnight? It seemed to happen during daytime hours. Was there a way to handle this to minimize the impact on operations? As a follow-up, did you learn from this situation to avoid similar issues in the future, or was it beyond your control due to the technology involved?
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Thanks, Mike. This is Rob. So let me clarify a couple of things. The cyberattack that occurred was a couple of weeks ago. It was from a known hacking entity. And the malware that was associated with the attack was quickly identified and quickly quarantined and did not have any operational impact. The outage that we had that was a week ago today was not related directly to the malware but it was related to trying to purge the remnants of the quarantine software that was part of that. So the server outage that we had was part of repairing our system from the earlier attack. It was not caused by the malware.
Mike Linenberg, Analyst
Did you learn anything from this? I noticed on the blogs that this incident happened during the day; should it have taken place at night instead? I'm curious because it had a significant impact.
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Mike, this is Chip. I would say that what we've shared may highlight some costs we've incurred. We have certainly gained valuable lessons from this experience. The impact was not only due to its occurrence during the day and the involvement of a major bank, but it was further complicated by our technological infrastructure. We utilize electronic maintenance logs, which might make us unique among airlines in the U.S., and we have one of the most technologically advanced operations in the country. Given this, we can analyze various redundancy elements and the timing of our actions. However, I assure you that with the expertise we have developed through collaboration with our partners and the insights we've gained internally, we still have a strong belief in our systems. We will be implementing several new processes and strategies to ensure something like this never happens again. While there is a mix of good and mostly bad news regarding this incident, we remain confident in how IT departments are handling the current challenges related to cyberattacks. The unfortunate aspect is how we managed the repair and maintenance, but we've learned significant lessons from that process.
Mike Linenberg, Analyst
I have a second question, Rob. When you discussed the partner concessions, you mentioned that you believe this is the last of them. Wade implied that we won’t see them again, but your wording suggested there might be a possibility of more in the future. I’m curious if you were referring to the true-ups related to the PSP, indicating there could be a small payment, and you were just being cautious about that. Or perhaps I misinterpreted your comments or read too much into them?
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
No, Mike. The only point I wanted to make is that with PSP1 and PSP2, there were some late true-ups at the end of the process. We haven't heard anything about anything similar for PSP3 at this point. So if there isn't, we are finished, but I would say it’s not impossible that we could be surprised by an additional true-up amount, but we are not aware of any.
Mike Linenberg, Analyst
Okay, great. Thanks, guys. Thanks, everyone.
Operator, Operator
Your next question is from Duane Pfennigwerth with Evercore ISI.
Duane Pfennigwerth, Analyst
Hey, thank you. I wanted to go back to Savi's question on the attrition. I wonder if you could put any numbers to kind of the current environment, kind of how was attrition running maybe six months ago and where is that today? The reason I think we're asking the question is some of the announcements that came out over the course of the quarter from some wholly owned, I think, over at American, where there were some kind of eye-popping bonuses around flow agreements and things of that sort? And maybe you could just help put your level of attrition in context and why you would or would not be impacted by some of those announcements that we saw?
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. So Duane, this is Chip again. Thanks for the question. We're not going to get into specifics about the number of attrition. I would say that it is clearly double digits plus more than it was six months ago. I would emphasize it as expected. And I would also suggest that our hiring and training is outpacing our increased attrition numbers. So I think those are the key variables that you would look to from us. And as we looked at our classes that go out almost nine months from now, the announcement from those particular wholly-owned carriers that you mentioned does not appear to have had any impact or at least meaningful impact on that. Like we really didn't see anything. So look, that having been said, I think that's as much detail as we can give. It's higher by double-digit increases but also our hiring is outpacing what the increase is. And we're extremely focused on targeting this over the next couple of years.
Duane Pfennigwerth, Analyst
I believe your operational reliability has improved significantly both historically and currently. If this results in higher costs for you temporarily, do you think you will eventually receive compensation for it?
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
I think you have to look at the broader view of the economy. I think that there's probably not just our industry but many industries that are grappling with labor shortages, supply chain shortages, raw material price increases, and increases in fuel. And when you look at all of those variables, I would suggest that as we move forward, there will be upward pressure on our revenue models too as we renew and as we renegotiate to encapsulate that. So the industry needs yields, obviously, in business travel and international travel to help recover what's happening on the internal domestic model. But I think that there's a lot of factors beyond just pilot supply that give us pause relative to recovering some of our cost increases.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
Hi, good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for the time. So historically, we've seen 50-seater capacity negatively impacted by higher fuel prices. Your fleet is much, much less exposed to this aircraft type than historically. But can you just walk us through how the higher fuel environment is impacting your remaining 50-seater fleet? Like I know for a time, you were actually seeing unexpected short-term extensions on 50-seaters. When do those start to roll off? And what are the conversations around the 50-seaters look like?
Wade Steel, Chief Commercial Officer
Yes, Catherine, this is Wade. As you know, we have around 140 to 150 50-seaters in our fleet. Currently, the demand for the 50-seaters with our major partners remains strong. Both partners are interested in increasing their 50-seat capacity. We are actively engaging with them regarding this demand and how to fulfill those needs. The rising fuel costs will pose some challenges for our prorate business, and we will closely monitor that situation. We have the flexibility to reallocate hours if we find the situation unfavorable. Overall, there is still significant demand for the 50-seaters from our partners at this time, and our contracts for these aircraft extend into 2024 and 2025.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
And maybe just a very quick follow-up to that question and then I have one more. But what's the RFP environment like more generally? Obviously, there's been quite a few announcements on the 75 seaters recently. Do you think we're starting to bump up against scope on that aircraft type? Or do you think there's appetite for more?
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
We work with all of our major partners, Catherine, on their demand. Right now, it's probably not as much about historical RFPs. We're always reviewing the fleet plan with them. That's what we like to say. And there's just always opportunities that we're creatively working with them on getting more and more 76 seaters into our fleet. As you've seen what we've been able to do with Delta, American, Alaska, we've been very creative with each of our partners to review their fleet needs and work with them proactively on their fleet and how we can accommodate and help them through these difficult times. And so we've just been more proactive than anything and we'll continue to do that. We'll continue to work with our partners on their demands and their needs and what they're trying to accomplish.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
I might just sneak one more in here. I appreciate it all the time. I know you still have a decent amount of CapEx next year, although quite a bit lower than it's been over the last several years. If nothing changes in terms of incremental aircraft getting added to your fleet, do you think your balance sheet would be in a position to start returning cash to shareholders right around October 1, 2022 and that's for CARES Act restrictions?
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Hello, Katie, it's Rob here. We're projecting our capital expenditure to be close to $600 million this year, possibly a bit more. Next year, factoring in the 26 additional E175s we expect to take delivery of, it seems to be in the $800 million range. We're pleased to have strong projects for allocating our cash and capital. Regarding the CARES Act restrictions, they will expire next September. However, we will carefully assess our liquidity and balance sheet situation. Currently, we're happy to have emerged from COVID with less debt net of cash than we had before. We are committed to maintaining liquidity for the time being.
Catherine O'Brien, Analyst
Got it. That's my bad. I was looking at the last 10-Q, didn't include the new agreement which is Delta. So, thanks guys for the time.
Robert Simmons, Chief Financial Officer
Okay. Thanks, Katie.
Operator, Operator
And with that, I'll now turn the call back over to Chip Childs for closing remarks.
Chip Childs, President and Chief Executive Officer
Great. Thank you, Tina. Again, we want to thank you for joining us on the call today. We really appreciate your interest in SkyWest. I again want to thank our people for the great work that they are doing. We still fundamentally believe that you are essential to the industry and to our company. And with that, we will talk to you next quarter.
Operator, Operator
Thank you again for joining us today. This does conclude today's presentation. You may now disconnect.