Posted on 03/25/2020 5:13:36 AM PDT by Kaslin
If cash transfers to failing businesses are now a given any time the economy is in crisis, then where is the bailout for small businesses?
Demanding what they claim is necessary to remain solvent and save the 750,000 jobs that maintain the industry, United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Airlines, and Southwest Airlines want $29 billion in cash handouts and another $25 billion in loans from American taxpayers. The current House stimulus bill would give $37 billion in grants and $21 in loans with zero percent financing.
When asked about the proposed bailout package, Trump said in a press conference, Were going to look at it very strongly. Were going to back the airlines 100%, he said.
Since the Trump administration is considering as much as $900 billion in economic relief due to COVID-19, its certainly realistic that the airlines will get what theyre asking for.
To be sure, the airline industry is critical to the world economy and drives millions of jobs. The bailout would be easier to stomach, though, if the major airlines hadnt spent 96 percent of their free cash flow, or 38.6 billion, on buying back their stock to inflate prices and handing the cash to shareholders, thus depriving themselves of at least some of the funds to weather the present crisis.
Meanwhile, small businesses across the country, especially in states hit hardest by the virus like Washington and New York, are struggling to stay afloat. On March 15 Washington Gov. Jay Inslee ordered all restaurants, bars, and recreational facilities to shut down except for drive-through and takeout orders, leaving thousands of wait staff with no one to wait on and business owners scrambling to pay vendors and employees after a massive and sustained decline in sales.
The plight of these small businesses seem even more unjust in light of how the airlines have managed their cash flow over the last several years. While more than 30 million small business owners nationwide have hustled to recover, grow, and start new businesses over the past decade, indebted airlines spent their cash on open market stock repurchases. Small businesses with their razor-thin margins could hardly have been expected to save for an event like this. But the airlines knew better.
In a previous filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, American Airlines noted that the airline industry would be materially affected by an outbreak of a contagious disease such as the Ebola virus, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome…or any other similar illness. They didnt have reason to suspect a catastrophe of this magnitude, of course. But this shows they were aware of risks to their business model that they did not adequately prepare for.
Instead of conserving some of their profits for a disease outbreak, American Airlines spent $12.4 billion in stock buybacks since 2014 while holding $29 billion in debt. Southwest Airlines spent $8.6 billion repurchasing stock in the last 5 years and holds $2.8 billion in debt. Delta and United spent $10.1 billion and $8.4 billion in the same time frame, respectively.
While there are some good reasons to buy back stock (such as when the market is pricing it below its intrinsic value) and its good to increase share value for shareholders, buybacks come with opportunity costs. American Airlines bought back 37 percent of its shares for $8.3 billion from mid-2014 through 2016. They borrowed heavily to fund those big share buybacks along with capital spending to fund its aircraft purchases.
Its essential to invest in business improvements like aircraft. Debt was cheap then, and business was pretty good. But what happens when disaster strikes? American restricted its cash flow and took on debt, and now that debt has become a huge liability in light of a catastrophe they knew was likely to happen at some point. The other major airlines likewise chose to spend huge portions of cashflow (47 percent in the case of United, 44 percent for Southwest) in buybacks over conserving for such black swan events.
Airline executives opted to inflate earnings per share (profit divided by number of outstanding shares – an indicator of whether a company is a good investment) by taking shares off the market instead of shoring up emergency funds and paying down debt. These boosts in stock price from buybacks tend to be temporary because they do nothing to actually increase the companys value, but executives are heavily compensated in stock options and awards. Theyre incentivized to conduct buybacks for short-term gain at the expense of long-term durability, which is better for shareholders in the long run.
The airlines short-sightedness got themselves into this mess. If cash transfers to failing businesses are now a given any time the economy is in crisis, then where is the bailout for small businesses who almost never have the cash flow to save for such a catastrophe?
Owner-operators of small businesses are losing sleep over how theyll pay their employees, much less their mortgages. Yet the airlines have the audacity to demand at least one-sixth of what the Trump administration is cumulatively offering other troubled sectors, half of that in grants, despite the industry contributing just 5.1 percent of Americas gross domestic product, while small businesses contributing 43.5 percent of our GDP are slated to get only loans at roughly 3-4 percent interest.
Adding insult to injury, small businesses arguably were forced to fund this irresponsible behavior through taxes. Corporate tax revenue to the government dropped by $92 billion after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, but buybacks increased by $287 billion, meaning that, as the Harvard Business Review put it, The federal government essentially funded $92 billion in buybacks by issuing debt and printing money to replace the lost corporate tax revenues.
Ive worked in small businesses and been surrounded by small business owner-operators my entire life. Over the past six years, my husbands parents have built a restaurant business with three locations and a stellar reputation in a small city in Washington. Theyve worked countless 70-hour weeks, took risks by investing their own money and given up more stable and higher-paying jobs to run the business. Millions of small business owners across the country have done much the same, including more than 600,000 in Washington State, and like my in-laws business, its only a matter of days before they are in the red.
New York City is offering small business grants to cover up to 40 percent of payroll costs for two months, and the city of Seattle has issued a moratorium on evictions of small businesses and $1.5 million in grants. But Washington states government has no plan to help business owners in the rest of the state besides tax deferment, fee waivers, and pointing them to the Small Business Association for loans.
Small business owners dont qualify for unemployment in Washington, either, since they dont pay unemployment insurance tax. I reached out to the governors office to see if they have any further plans to assist small businesses. They did not respond by publishing time.
Businesses with fewer than 100 employees employ nearly around 700,000 employees in Washington alone. Businesses with fewer than 20 workers make up nearly 90 percent of U.S. firms and employ almost 5.3 million workers, or seven times the aforementioned airlines 750,000. They are the backbone of our economy and our communities; many of them contribute to our rich culture in food, clothing, and wares.
Small eateries are where most good food is found and small shopping districts around the country bring locals together and pull in tourist dollars with their charm and intrigue. These businesses dont just provide for families, they are formative to the American way of life, and a vast number of them are suffering profoundly.
State and federal governments are working overtime to care for the unemployed, underemployed, and homeless. But it seems the grim plight of arguably the hardest-working, toughest, and most intrepid segment of the population is only acknowledged to the extent that the small business failure means their employees are out of work.
Its true that President Trump is proposing $300 billion for a small-business interruption loan program, but realize this is all for employees, not owner-operators. The loans are, according to the Wall Street Journal, to temporarily cover payroll costs for employees. Trump has also directed the SBA to provide Economic Injury Disaster Loans with a cap of 4 percent interest to businesses affected by the virus, the purpose of which is to cover business costs they would have been able to meet if it werent for the disaster.
As for Congress, House lawmakers evidently will get away with mandating paid sick leave for smaller businesses while exempting those with more than 500 employees. When the government turns its attention to smaller businesses, the focus appears to be entirely on the employees, not on the people who started the business and worked seven days a week to make a living for their families.
We have to assume no one is coming to save us, my mother-in-law said soberly when the family met to discuss the business future. With federal disaster loans becoming available, prospects may change. But having run through at least a dozen ways they can modify operations, its hard to see how the business can remain in the black without immediate assistance, much less support their family.
Americans are tired of privatizing the wins and socializing the losses like the government did 12 years ago in the last bailout. Leftists support socializing more of the wins like requiring businesses to administer more benefits to workers, while fiscal conservatives generally support privatizing the losses. Either way, the cronyism and double standards for big and small businesses must end.
President Trump was elected on promises to drain the swamp and look after the little guy. With the irresponsible airlines and the small businesses facing extinction in this crisis, its time for him to deliver on those promises. Airlines dont need or deserve grants. If small businesses must settle for loans to cover essential costs, then the airlines can do the sameand be legally bound to give up buybacks for the duration of their loans.
Better yet, as Henry Blodget wrote in Business Insider, they must issue equity to taxpayers so we can share in their recoveries. Given how the airlines have recklessly made their businesses more fragile and undermined national economic security, thats more than fair.
This raises future expectations. From now on, they will be expecting a handout when there’s a crisis, and be more likely to take risky actions!
I don’t understand the Boeing bailout. Their problems were self-inflicted with the 737 Max and the Air Force tanker, not a result of the Cornoavirus.
The U.S. government isnt bailing out the airline industry to save air travel. Its bailing out the airline industry so these companies can pay for all the new aircraft theyve purchased from Boeing.
NN Taleb has written about "Skin in the game". If Business leaders take risks and profit from good outcomes but can offload to taxpayers the losses from bad outcomes, then business leaders will always favor risky ventures. That's not what you want.
All the airlines need is gap money and the ability to break the union stranglehold and the stranglehold isn’t going anywhere. Two months from now they’ll be making money hand over fist with cheap fuel prices.
Chew on this, most of the Unionized employees at the airlines will vote Democratic(socialist) come November.
I was never a fan of T.B.T.F. the last time around.
We had three big auto manufaturers, although they are not all ‘domestic’ corporations anymore, and a great history, but still I believe that a kind of darwinism for corporations is a good thing. If you can’t keep your ship seaworthy, it’s going down.
On the other hand, domestic airlines are a bit of a strategic concern. I remember saying over twenty years ago that we should pass a Domestic energy national security act where by the means of production, conversion (or refinement), and distribution should all be made robust and free from foreign influence. Well, in some ways, we’ve got there anyway, particularly with production. Airlines are not as crucial to the entire economy as energy is, but it should not be overlooked.
Small businesses should not be penalized for this whole mess, but to compare them in general to the airlines, I think, is just divisive. There are different standards for assessing their strategic importance.
The ones who are really screwed here are all the gig workers and freelance/independent workers.
No unemployment, no free money other than the $1200 bucks going to everyone else.
Meanwhile literally trillions and trillions to large corporations.
Screw the cattle car airlines. I dont care. They sacrificed security for profit a long time ago, ala 911.
Money given to any business should be a loan, zero interest, repayment schedule to be determined by each businesses return to profitability. Any business that was not in good financial condition at the end of 2019 is not eligible. No handouts.
Airline bailouts should be conditioned on (1) Make all seats sized for current average American, at a minimum, (2) Make all onboard (or at least one on smaller planes) restrooms sized for current average American, at a minimum, (3) set up support animal to include dogs only and only when properly licensed and trained (such as those used by vets), and (4) Require full refund for any flight delayed on tarmac over 2 hours or otherwise over 4 hours. Give passengers some real bill of rights as condition for public bailout.
Airlines Shouldnt Be Given Better Bailouts Than Small Businesses
All businesses go thru periods of "not good financial condition". They should not have to die because a politician panics and shuts any chance of that business recovering. Loans sound great until you have to wait for months and file endless paperwork to be even eligible. Also, many people have jobs at businesses that aren't in the best financial position.
1. I cannot deduct the cost of medical insurance on my taxes. This is absurd on its face. Not only is health insurance fully deductible for companies who insure their employees, but this is also a TAX-FREE benefit for those employees as well. This makes no sense.
2. I am not eligible to collect unemployment. This one actually makes sense for obvious reasons: a business owner cant lay himself off, and providing unemployment insurance for sole proprietors is a major incentive for them to game the system. But I would certainly recommend a corrective measure where small businesses are able to put aside a percentage of their pre-tax gross revenues in cash reserves that function like retirement accounts but can be tapped as needed during rough times like this.
Sure, no bailout, let them all go bankrupt, put all their workers on unemployment, let them sell apples, let them drink themselves to death, let them commit suicide.
It is not proper for the federal government to bail out small businesses or airlines.
I have no problem with necessary and proper tax refunds.
Historically, the airline industry has enjoyed enormous financial support for the government as part of our National Defense. Rapid Mobilization Capacity. By law they have to turn over everything to the government on a moments notice. They have never been notified AFAIK but its there, in the. Laws.
Metro NYC corporations might form Club 737 New York and buy financially distressed airliners.
Timeshares in airliners might be offered to Mayor Pete’s city and others.
That ship sailed a long time ago. Or should I say, that Plane took off a long time ago.
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