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The CEOs of Southwest Airlines and American Airlines both want Boeing to deliver planes on time. "Boeing has been a great partner for the whole 53 years of Southwest Airlines, but we need Boeing to be strong. Southwest's fleet consists of 228 Boeing 737 Max 8s, 381 Boeing 737-800s, and 207 Boeing 737-700s, according to aviation website FlightRadar24. Southwest reported earlier this year that it expected to receive around 20 Boeing 737 Max 8. The manufacturer announced on Monday that it is offering 90 million common shares and about $5 billion worth of depositary shares for sale.
Persons: , Bob Jordan, Robert Isom, Jordan, it's, Isom, they're, We've, he's, Kelly Ortberg, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase Organizations: Southwest Airlines, American Airlines, Boeing, Service, Southwest, Yahoo Finance, Max, CNBC, Alaska Airlines, SEC, Bank of America, Citibank, JPMorgan, Business
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC’s full interview with Southwest Airlines CEO Bob JordanSouthwest Airlines CEO Bob Jordan joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss Southwest's deal with Elliott Investment Management, the company's third-quarter results, and more.
Persons: Bob Jordan Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Bob Jordan Southwest, Elliott Investment Management
Top 10 things to watch Thursday, Oct. 24 CNBC's Matthew J. Belvedere with the help of Jeff Marks wrote this dispatch. Tesla shares were jumping 14.5% and leading the Nasdaq toward a higher open after the EV maker beat on quarterly earnings per share (EPS). Club industrial stocks Honeywell and Dover were dropping after issuing quarterly results. Semiconductor equipment maker Lam Research beat on quarterly earnings and revenue and its stock jumped 5%. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade.
Persons: Matthew J, Jeff Marks, Stocks, Jensen Huang, TSMC, Oppenheimer, Boeing machinists, Gary Kelly, Bob Jordan, EBITDA, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Ritzau Scanpix, Mads Claus Rasmussen Organizations: Nasdaq, Elon, Honeywell, Dover, Nvidia, Blackwell, Semiconductor, Lam Research, Boeing, Southwest Airlines, Elliott Investment Management, United Parcel Service, International, Mobile, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, EIFO, NVIDIA, Vilhelm, Via Reuters Locations: India, Southwest, Kastrup, Denmark
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSouthwest CEO Bob Jordan: Elliott deal is good for our shareholdersBob Jordan, Southwest Airlines CEO, joins CNBC's 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss Southwest's deal with Elliott Investment Management, the company's third-quarter results, and more.
Persons: Bob Jordan, Elliott Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Elliott Investment Management
Elliott Investment Management launched a podcast to influence Southwest Airlines shareholders. AdvertisementLast week, activist firm Elliott Investment Management launched a podcast as part of its efforts to influence Southwest Airlines shareholders. Related storiesElliott said its "Stronger Southwest" podcast will have one-on-one conversations with the firm's nominated directors. But companies like Southwest and Disney, which saw similar activist interest last year, have a lot of individual investors. Before the podcast, Elliott rolled out a website and accounts on Instagram, X, and YouTube.
Persons: , Elliott, Bob Jordan, Jordan, Gary Kelly, Southwest's, Gregg Saretsky —, Scott Bisang, Bisang, Cas Sydorowitz, Georgeson, Sydorowitz, Disney, Nelson Peltz, Bob Iger Organizations: Elliott Investment Management, Southwest, Service, Apple, YouTube, Bloomberg, Disney, Hollywood
A Southwest Airlines plane takes off from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) in Atlanta, Georgia, US, on Friday, July 12, 2024. Elliott Investment Management and Southwest Airlines have been discussing a settlement that would give the activist investor significant representation on the airline's board, according to people familiar with the matter. The settlement talks are predicated on a deal that would give Elliott less than full board control, said the people, who asked not to be named because the negotiations are confidential. Southwest's board will drop to 12 members after Chairman Gary Kelly steps down next year, meaning Elliott would likely end up wither fewer than six selections. The talks are in early stages, and it's possible that no deal could be reached, some sources said.
Persons: Elliott, Gary Kelly, Bob Jordan, Jordan Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Hartsfield, Jackson Atlanta International, Elliott Investment Management, Bloomberg News, Dallas Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Atlanta
Elliott Investment Management has requested a special meeting at Southwest Airlines , formalizing the launch of a long-signaled proxy fight for control of the carrier's board. Elliott has also trimmed the size of its board slate from 10 director candidates to eight, after Southwest shrunk its board size from 15 to 12. CNBC reported last month that Elliott was preparing to call a special meeting. David Hess, who joined Southwest's board in 2021, was also on the board of Arconic in the midst of its proxy fight with Elliott. Elliott has never before called for a special meeting, which at Southwest carries a higher threshold of approval compared with voting at a regularly scheduled shareholder meeting.
Persons: Elliott, Bob Jordan, Gary Kelly, David Hess, Elliott . Hess, Jordan, Southwest's, John Pike, Bobby Xu, — CNBC's Leslie Josephs Organizations: Hartsfield, Jackson Atlanta International, Elliott Investment Management, Southwest Airlines, Southwest, CNBC, Alcoa, Artisan Partners, Salesforce, Starbucks Locations: Atlanta , Georgia
DALLAS — Southwest Airlines executives on Thursday outlined for Wall Street their vision to boost profits: extra legroom seats starting in 2026, assigned seating, international partnerships and overnight flights. Southwest’s new plan comes as its leaders seeks to fend off activist Elliott Investment Management, which has called for leadership changes. He had served as CEO of AirTran, the airline Southwest combined with in 2011, and was a consultant to Southwest after the merger. Southwest has supported Jordan despite calls for his replacement by Elliott, which didn’t immediately respond to the airline’s plan it laid out on Thursday. He called Southwest’s plan intentional and detailed.
Persons: , Ryan Green, , Bob Fornaro, Fornaro, Bob Jordan, Jordan, Elliott, didn’t, ” Jordan, “ We’ve, — CNBC’s Rohan Goswami Organizations: DALLAS, Southwest Airlines, Wall, Elliott Investment Management, Federal Aviation Administration, Southwest, Spirit Airlines, AirTran, Boeing Locations: Southwest, Atlanta, Dallas, Hawaii
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe plan to monetize every aircraft delivery, says Southwest CEO Bob JordanSouthwest CEO Bob Jordan joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' and CNBC's Phil LeBeau to talk its three-year plan, battling with activist investors, recent troubles at Boeing and more.
Persons: Bob Jordan, Phil LeBeau Organizations: Boeing
DALLAS — Southwest Airlines raised its third-quarter revenue forecast on Thursday, announced its board authorized $2.5 billion in share buybacks and detailed a host of changes to its business model as it seeks to fend off activist Elliott Investment Management. Southwest executives are presenting their vision for the company's future at the airline's Dallas headquarters on Thursday in an investor day presentation. Southwest executives will try to convince investors that it is on the right track to boost profits and increase revenue. A day earlier, Southwest told staff it will slash its service in Atlanta next year and could cut more than 300 flight attendants and pilots from the city in an effort to reduce costs. Elliott later told Southwest mechanics' union that it still wanted a leadership change at the top of the carrier.
Persons: Bob Fornaro, Fornaro, Bob Jordan, Elliott, Gary Kelly, didn't, — CNBC's Rohan Goswami Organizations: DALLAS, Airlines, Elliott Investment Management, Spirit Airlines, Southwest, AirTran, Dallas Locations: Atlanta
Elliott Management said Tuesday it will call a special meeting at Southwest Airlines "as soon as next week," shortly after the company put forward a sweeping board shakeup that it hoped might stave off a proxy fight. The push comes days before the airline's investor meeting, where it is expected to unveil improvements and operating changes. Southwest's shareholder meeting is typically scheduled for May, but by calling for a special meeting Elliott is looking to elect new directors much sooner than that. Earlier this month, executive chairman and former CEO Gary Kelly said he would step down after the carrier's shareholder meeting next year. "The need for change is urgent, and our request for a special meeting may come as soon as next week," Pike and Xu said.
Persons: Elliott, Bob Jordan, Gary Kelly, John Pike, Bobby Xu, Pike, Xu, Andrew Watterson, Robert Jordan Organizations: Elliott Management, Southwest Airlines, Airlines, Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association
Mission Produce , Calavo Growers — Shares gained 20% after the avocado producer reported a year-over-year revenue increase of 24% for the fiscal third quarter. Calavo Growers advanced around 12% after the rival producer reported adjusted earnings of 57 cents per share in its fiscal third quarter. That is more than the 43 cents per share that analysts were expecting, according to FactSet. Oracle — Shares of the database software company surged more than 11% after a fiscal first-quarter beat on the top and bottom lines. For the fiscal second quarter, the company saw growth of 4% in preliminary consolidated same-store sales.
Persons: Russell Hutchinson, LSEG, Piper Sandler, Hewlett Packard, Rubrik, FactSet, Patterson, Gary Kelly, Bob Jordan, Alibaba, Daniel Pinto, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Ally, Mission, Calavo, Calavo Growers, Oracle —, Oracle, Amazon Web Services, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Hewlett, Juniper Networks, UTI, Southwest Airlines —, Elliott Investment Management, Hong, Reuters, JPMorgan Locations: U.S, Alibaba —, China, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen
A Southwest Airlines plane takes off from Hollywood Burbank Airport above other Southwest planes on July 25, 2024 in Burbank, California. Southwest Airlines said Tuesday that executive chairman and former CEO Gary Kelly will retire next year and announced a board shakeup, moves that come as the carrier faces pressure for changes by activist investor Elliott Investment Management. Elliott in June revealed a nearly $2 billion stake in Southwest, seeking to oust leadership, including CEO Bob Jordan, who has also spent nearly four decades at the carrier. Southwest has also brought in outside experts, including Bob Fornaro, former CEO of Spirit Airlines and AirTran, which Southwest acquired. Southwest has an investor day scheduled for Sept. 26 in Dallas to expand on these and other initiatives.
Persons: Gary Kelly, Kelly, Herb Kelleher, Elliott, Bob Jordan, Bob Fornaro Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Elliott Investment Management, Southwest, Dallas, Texas, Spirit Airlines, Boeing, U.S Locations: Hollywood, Burbank , California, Southwest, Dallas
Activist investor Elliott Management is preparing to launch a proxy fight at Southwest Airlines , and intends to nominate as many as 10 directors to the company's 15-person board, according to a person familiar with the matter. Elliott plans to call a special meeting, rather than waiting for the company's annual shareholder meeting, the person said. Elliott needs to own at least 10% of the company in order to call a special meeting, under Southwest's bylaws, a threshold that it will likely cross soon. Southwest rebuffed those requests, and CEO Jordan since told CNBC that Elliott's engagement with the company had not been meaningful. The activist had already intimated that it would seek to call for a special meeting in its second letter to Southwest's board.
Persons: Elliott, Southwest's, Bob Jordan, Gary Kelly, Jordan, Brian Niccol Organizations: Elliott Management, Southwest Airlines, CNBC, Starbucks, Southwest, Budget, Spirit Airlines, Wall Street Locations: U.S
Aerospace veteran Robert “Kelly” Ortberg becomes Boeing’s new CEO on Thursday with a singular mission: restoring the reputation of a U.S. manufacturing icon. Boeing's new CEO, Robert "Kelly" Ortberg. Ortberg’s Day 1 activity is walking the floor of Boeing’s factory in Renton, Washington, where it builds its bestselling but problematic 737 Max. The airline’s CEO hinted at the big feat Ortberg has ahead of him. “We look forward to working with Kelly Ortberg in his efforts to return Boeing to its place as the leading American aerospace company,” CEO Bob Jordan said in a written statement.
Persons: Robert “ Kelly ” Ortberg, Robert " Kelly, Ortberg, , Rockwell Collins, Richard Aboulafia, ” Ortberg, Boeing’s, Butch Wilmore, Suni Williams, Ron Epstein, , isn’t, ” Jon Holden, Dave Calhoun, Calhoun, Dennis Muilenburg, Max, Chicago —, Kelly Ortberg, Bob Jordan, , Michael Sheetz Organizations: Boeing, AFP, Getty, Ortberg’s, National Transportation, Air Force One, NASA, SpaceX, International Space, Airbus, Bank of America, International Association of Machinists, Aerospace Workers, Arlington , Virginia —, , Southwest Airlines Locations: U.S, Renton , Washington, Portland , Oregon, , Washington state, Oregon, Arlington , Virginia, Chicago, Seattle, American
Open seating helped Southwest load and unload passengers, which Southwest CEO Bob Jordan said meant more on-time departures and cost savings on Thursday’s earnings call. Even as other airlines switched to assigned seats in recent decades, Southwest kept its boarding process the same. ‘Sad day’Some loyal Southwest customers vented their frustration about the policy change on social media. She worries she will have to pay extra for her traditional A-group seats as Southwest moves to assigned seats. But activist pressure did not factor into the company’s move to assigned seats, Southwest CEO Jordan said on the earnings call.
Persons: Herb Kelleher, , you’ve, William Thomas Cain, Bob Jordan, Gary Kelly, ” “, , Sandy Wolfe, , Wolfe, Jordan, William McGee Organizations: New, New York CNN, Southwest Airlines, Southwest, , CNN, Elliot Investment Management, United, Delta, American Economic Liberties Locations: New York, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Southwest, here’s, , American, United States
In today's big story, Southwest ditching its unassigned seat policy is a sign of the end times for budget airlines as we know it. Southwest Airlines is ending its open seating policy , opting for assigned and premium seating options. Between paid seat assignments and premium seating, Southwest could add as much as $3 billion in new revenue, according to one analyst. AdvertisementKevin Carter/Getty ImagesThe real pain of the current travel landscape is being felt by budget airlines. That's why Southwest's decision to end its open seating policy could be a sign of the end of budget airlines as we know it, writes BI's Taylor Rains and Pete Syme.
Persons: , Chelsea Jia Feng, Elliott Management's, wasn't, Insider's Benjamin Zhang, Kevin Carter, BI's Taylor Rains, Pete Syme, Bob Jordan, Goldman Sachs, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Prince Williams, Getty, Griffin, Tyler Le, NKSFB, Chris Brown, Rupert Murdoch, Murdoch, they're, They're, Claudia Sahm, Donald Trump, Benjamin Netanyahu, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Business, Southwest Airlines, Southwest, Southwest isn't, Bank of America, Getty, Bauer, Fox, News Corp, Mar Locations: Southwest, , Taylor, Los Angeles, Lago, New York, London
Southwest Airlines airplanes are serviced at their gates at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on May 18, 2024, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Shares of Southwest fell 4% in premarket trading Thursday. Revenue per available seat mile, a gauge of airline pricing power, fell 3.8%, roughly in line with Southwest's reduced forecast last month. Southwest reported adjusted per-share earnings of 58 cents a share, above analysts' expectations. The airline is in the middle of an overhaul as pressure mounts from investors to do more increase revenue.
Persons: Bob Jordan, Jordan Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Hollywood International Airport, Southwest, Boeing, Elliott Investment Management, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines Locations: Fort Lauderdale, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, U.S
Southwest Airlines is ending open seating and will offer extra legroom seats on its airplanes as mounting pressure on the carrier to increase revenue prompts the biggest changes to its business model in its 53 years of flying. The airline plans to start selling the first flights that will offer extra legroom next year, it said Thursday. When travelers choose a competitor over Southwest, the airline found in its research that its open seating model was the No. Rival carriers offer a host of options to upsell customers like extra legroom seats, premium economy or business class. Southwest will provide more details about the upcoming changes at an investor day at the end of September.
Persons: they'll, Bob Jordan, Jordan Organizations: Southwest, Southwest Airlines, Elliott Investment Management, Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, Analysts Locations: Dallas, Delta, United
Southwest CEO Bob Jordan: Not happy with our results in Q2
  + stars: | 2024-07-25 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSouthwest CEO Bob Jordan: Not happy with our results in Q2CNBC’s Phil LeBeau and Southwest CEO Bob Jordan join 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss the airline's quarterly earnings results, the company's decision to end open seating, FAA's safety audit into the airline, impact of CrowdStrike's IT outage, and more.
Persons: Bob Jordan, Phil LeBeau Organizations: Southwest
Read previewBudget airlines are upending many of their original business plans as increased costs wreak havoc on their bottom lines. On Thursday, Southwest Airlines announced the end of its open seating policy, a 50-year practice of letting passengers choose their seats based on their boarding order instead of having one pre-assigned. Budget flying has been moving in this direction for yearsThe industry's sea change has left budget carriers scrambling to increase revenue without turning away customers, prompting major policy changes. Other budget airlines have been similarly evolving their business models in recent years. Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines, for example, ditched most cancellation and change fees for ticket holders.
Persons: , Savanthi, Raymond James, Henry Harteveldt, Scott Kirby, Bob Jordan, Jordan, I'm Organizations: Service, Southwest Airlines, Business, Frontier Airlines, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue, Spirit, United Airlines, CNBC Locations: Southwest
Southwest Airlines will start assigning seats to passengers, ending its longstanding policy of allowing passengers to pick their seats once they have boarded, the airline said on Thursday. The new procedure will be implemented to increase revenue and in response to feedback from customers, 80 percent of whom report preferring an assigned seat, Southwest said. “This is the right choice — at the right time — for our customers, our people and our shareholders,” said Bob Jordan, the president and chief executive of Southwest. The new policy was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal. The changes bring Southwest, which for years has distinguished itself by offering low prices and a simple business approach, more in line with conventional airlines like American Airlines and United Airlines.
Persons: , Bob Jordan Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Southwest, Wall Street, American Airlines and United Airlines
Can Boeing get back to its glory days?
  + stars: | 2024-07-18 | by ( Leslie Josephs | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +17 min
Then on Jan. 5, about six minutes and 16,000 feet into a packed flight out of Portland, Oregon, a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9. The Federal Aviation Administration barred Boeing from increasing output of its Max planes and stepped up hands-on inspections at production plants. The 737 was dubbed "Baby Boeing" and went on to become the company's bestseller, helping to make Boeing the largest U.S. exporter. Pilots in those Boeing planes fought against a flight-control system, the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, that pushed the nose of the planes downward repeatedly. Boeing has said it aims to increase rates to about 50 Max planes a month in the next few years.
Persons: Joshua Roberts, Max, AeroSystems, Sen, Richard Blumenthal, Conn, Dave Calhoun, Boeing hasn't, Brian West, Aengus Kelly, Bob Jordan, I'm, Antonoaldo Neves, Calhoun, Steve Mollenkopf, Pat Shanahan, Donald Trump, Barack Obama, AerCap's Kelly, Mulugeta Ayene, we've, NASA —, Scott Kirby, McDonnell Douglas, Rob Spingarn, Kirby, Spirit Aerosystems, William Campbell, it's, It's, Howard McKenzie, Kevin Lamarque, Goldman Sachs, Noah Poponak, Alex Krutz Organizations: American Airlines Boeing, Reagan National, FAA, Reuters Boeing, Wall, Boeing, Justice Department, Alaska Airlines, National Transportation Safety Board, NTSB, Via Reuters Industry, Farnborough, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus, JPMorgan, Etihad Airways, General Electric, Blackstone, Qualcomm, Lion, Ethiopian Airlines, Pilots, Justice, Reuters, NASA, Lion Air, CNBC, Research, Max, Spirit, Corbis, Jefferies, DOJ, Senate Homeland Security, Governmental Affairs, Capitol, Patriot Industrial Partners Locations: Los Angeles, United States, Washington , U.S, Portland , Oregon, Alaska, U.S, Maldives, Wall, United Kingdom, Boeing's, Emirates, Southwest, United, Indonesia, Addis Ababa, Bishoftu, Debre Zeit, Ethiopia, BOZEMAN , MT, Wichita , Kansas, Bozeman, Bozeman , Montana, Seattle, Chicago, Arlington , Virginia, Wichita, South Carolina, Washington
The first full week of earnings kicked off earlier this week, with results from some of the biggest banks on Monday and Tuesday. Its estimated EPS for the current quarter has fallen more than 16% to 94 cents a share. The stock has been under pressure during this stretch, dropping 11.6% in the past three months as of Tuesday's close. Southwest Airlines made the list after receiving 28 downward EPS revisions, resulting in a consensus estimate that fell 35.1% in the three months. Last month, Charlotte-based steelmaker Nucor cut its second-quarter earnings guidance , a major factor behind analysts' 21 earnings estimate cuts over the past three months.
Persons: postmarket, Elliott, Bob Jordan, Gary Kelly Organizations: United Airlines, Netflix, CNBC, Starbucks, Southwest Airlines, Elliott Management, Dominion Freight, Intel Corp Locations: Dallas, Charlotte, Nucor
CNBC Daily Open: Are markets overly optimistic?
  + stars: | 2024-07-09 | by ( Abid Ali | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., December 1, 2023. This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. While open to collaboration, Elliott plans to give shareholders a say in leadership changes if the board remains unresponsive. Despite selling $379 million worth of bitcoin in recent weeks, Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office still holds roughly 32,488 bitcoins — worth around $1.9 billion at today's prices.
Persons: Beryl, Elliott, Elliott Management, Bob Jordan, Gary Kelly, Corning, We've, Wendell Weeks, Max Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, CNBC, Nasdaq, Apple, Nvidia, Dow Jones, Treasury, Southwest Airlines, Police, Federal Criminal Police, Boeing, Wall Locations: New York City, U.S, Saxony, Texas
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