In This Article:
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is investigating after an engine cover fell off a Southwest Airlines (LUV) Boeing (BA) 737 Max jet during takeoff. TD Cowen Senior Research Analyst Helane Becker joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss her outlook on the airline sector amid this incident.
Considering the large number of flights that take off daily without incident, Becker states that the Southwest incident would not cause her to change her short-term outlook on Southwest's stock.
Nonetheless, Becker expresses broader concerns about the airline sector's ability to keep up with growing demand. She cites three key factors holding the industry back: increased oversight, delivery and production delays, and costs rising faster than revenues, impacting profit margins.
Despite these challenges, Becker names Delta (DAL) and United (UAL) as good buying opportunities in the airline sector, as demand is expected to recover for the summer months.
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.
Editor's note: This article was written by Angel Smith
Video Transcript
- The airline industry is facing mounting scrutiny following a new 737 incident that occurred Sunday when an engine cover came off during takeoff. Southwest is reviewing all of its Boeing aircrafts, but has declined to say when that specific plane's engine was last checked.
Let's discuss with our next guest here. We have Helane Becker, TD Cowen Senior Research Analyst. Thank you so much, Helane for being here. I want to talk about your call on LUV, the ticker for Southwest, because you'd been famously bullish on this name.
And we talked about it previously even after kind of the holiday flights fiasco. But then last fall, you changed it to a hold from a buy. Could this latest news from Southwest potentially push you into a sell rating on the name?
HELANE BECKER: Well, you never know, right? Depending on how things go. But right now, we're comfortable with the hold rating. This is one incident. But to your point, it follows the series of incidents not just at Southwest, but at other airlines involving Boeing aircraft.
But when you think about it in the whole scheme of things, how many flights there are per day and how mostly safe they are and how few incidences we have, I don't think this would cause me to change anything in the short term.
- Helane, how are you evaluating the risk here just ahead with what's to come from Boeing when you talk about leadership changes, when you talk about increased regulation, what exactly that could mean going forward not just for Southwest, but more broadly speaking for the airline sector? How are you evaluating that?