TSE:CJT Cargojet Q3 2024 Earnings Report C$75.43 -1.51 (-1.96%) As of 04/17/2025 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Cargojet EPS ResultsActual EPSC$1.48Consensus EPS C$1.14Beat/MissBeat by +C$0.34One Year Ago EPSC$0.30Cargojet Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ACargojet Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date11/4/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, November 5, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptInterim ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Cargojet Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 5, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Cargojet Conference Call. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Martin Hermann, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:11Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning on this call. With me on the call this morning are A. J. Vermoni, Carvedis' Executive Chairman Pauline Dillon and Jamie Porteous, our Co Chief Executive Officers Scott Calver, our Chief Financial Officer and Sanjeet Maeni, our Vice President, Finance. After opening remarks about the quarter, we will open the call for questions. Speaker 100:00:35I would like to point out that certain statements made on this call, such as those relating to our forecasted revenues, costs and strategic plans, are forward looking within the meaning of applicable securities laws. This call also includes references to non GAAP measures like adjusted EBITDA, adjusted earnings per share and return on invested capital. Please refer to our most recent press release and MD and A for important assumptions and cautionary statements relating to forward looking information and for a reconciliation of any non GAAP measures to GAAP income. I will now turn the call over to Jamie. Speaker 200:01:09Thanks, Marty. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on the call today. As we've done in the prior quarters, Pauline and I will share our prepared remarks before we pass the call over to our CFO, Scott, to give you a little bit more color on the financial drivers this quarter. Let me start by contrasting the macro transportation sector with Cargojet's recent performance. The transportation sector across North America continues to be challenged with weak domestic volumes and the industry has been slow to recover from the ongoing freight recession. Speaker 200:01:39However, Speaker 300:01:39when you Speaker 200:01:40look at Cargojet's results, you will notice that we are successfully turning challenges into opportunities. Let me give you a few examples that differentiate Cargojet from the norm. 1, with the recent high inflation and an economic slowdown in North America, consumers embraced ultra low cost products from China based direct to consumer merchants using new platforms like TIMU and Shen. This dampened the domestic e commerce volumes, but created a new stream of China to North America air cargo opportunity for Cargojet. We were on the forefront of this shift and secured a long term scheduled charter opportunity that we announced earlier this year between China and Canada. Speaker 200:02:20The frequencies flown per week on this route have continued to rise over the past few months to meet demand. 2, the geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and Ukraine have created supply chain opportunities and an increased need for air cargo services. More recently, the threat of a port worker strike at the East Coast also forced large retailers and manufacturers to think about alternative plans. These disruptions have created new ad hoc charter opportunities on several global routes with available aircraft capacity, we have been proactive in identifying key commodities that need to fly and adding to our ad hoc charter volumes. As a result, we posted very strong 15% growth in overall revenues and a 17% growth in adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. Speaker 200:03:09This was despite one less operating day in Q3, 2024 versus Q3 of the prior year. We have consistently been diversifying our business from both the product offering point of view as well as from geographic coverage. This combination has provided us with a solid foundation to create predictable earnings and cash flows for our shareholders. In the quarter, domestic revenues grew by 5.2%, ACMI posted a 12% gain and all in charters posted a record 60.2% growth versus the Q3 of 2023. Overall, we posted a 14.8% increase in revenues for the quarter as compared to the previous year. Speaker 200:03:51The improving interest rate environment and controlled inflation are fostering a more stable and optimistic economic outlook for Canada, which we believe bodes well for future domestic volumes. I talked about our decision to accelerate growth investment in 2767-three 100 aircraft during our last quarter remarks. Based on our current growth rate and opportunities we see emerging in 2025, we are confident in our fleet expansion strategy, particularly in the context of reductions in other Canadian freight operators, aircraft freighter fleets and available air cargo capacity and the emerging long range charter opportunities. We are also pleased to note that our growth CapEx was well within our stated goals on capital allocation and we are very happy with the progress we are making in our capital allocation strategy. We remain disciplined on optimizing CapEx and generating free cash flow, including a framework on how we will allocate capital through dividends, share buybacks and debt reduction. Speaker 200:04:53Although I should point out that we are not immune to the cost headwinds facing the aviation and overall supply chain sectors relating specifically to wages and other cost increases, which may impact future margins. However, this will not deter us from our capital allocation priorities. Scott will provide more color on how we are progressing against these objectives. We are also encouraged to see stronger peak season volume forecast from the majority of our customers and we are well positioned to serve our customers through this most important shopping season of the year. Pauline and I continue to work together on building growth opportunities, attracting the best talent and staying focused on operational and cost efficiency. Speaker 200:05:34We have recently and will continue to strengthen the talent in information technology, cybersecurity, finance and flight operations areas to meet our growing business requirements. We are very excited and confident about the continued growth opportunities that lie ahead for Cargojet, its employees and our shareholders. Let me now pass the microphone over to my colleague, Pauline. Speaker 400:05:56Thank you, Jamie. The growth opportunities that Jamie mentioned require a capital light execution strategy. In other words, grow our block hours without adding aircraft CapEx, and that's been our biggest priority. We have been focused on carefully orchestrating various pieces of our operations to allow us to maximize our fleet utilization, particularly given the complexity of serving Asia routes and the global reach of our ad hoc charter activity. We have a very predictable requirement for our aircraft fleet to support our Canadian overnight network and our ACMI business. Speaker 400:06:40Utilizing spare aircraft availability for charter opportunities is key to creating additional shareholder value. We are pleased to see that many of these pieces came together nicely during this quarter. As a result, Q3 block hours grew 15% with the same size of aircraft fleet that we had last year. To execute this strategy, we are still scaling up some cost areas and expect to reach a more normalized run rate in the first half of twenty twenty five. We continued our efforts to build strong talent and capabilities in our information technology functions. Speaker 400:07:22This is an 18 to 24 month journey, but it is critical to manage scale and complexity of the business and to build the foundation for future growth. We continue to add talent in other key areas of the business as well. Our fleet planning will be more robust and complex this year, given both the domestic as well as Asia networks. We have dedicated teams that work with key customers to ensure we deliver every single package on time for the holiday peak season. Our operations and safety teams are focused on preparing for all weather conditions. Speaker 400:08:01Our maintenance teams are focused on making sure that our aircraft as well as our ground handling equipment are fully serviceable at each base. Once again, in Q3, we delivered leading best in class on time performance of 98.7%. This is the single most important metric that our customers judge us by. We want to acknowledge and thank every member of the Cargojet team for their commitment to delivering the best customer experience and for their continued dedication. Jamie and I transitioned into our new roles at the start of this year. Speaker 400:08:40It has been an exciting, and I might add, exhilarating year of growth and opportunity. We are thrilled with the progress that we have made, both on the financial and operating performances of the company, but we do recognize much work still needs to be done. One thing has become very clear to us, there is no shortage of opportunities. We need to build capabilities that can profitably capture those opportunities and continue to provide our customers and our shareholders value. This now concludes my prepared comments, and I will turn the call over to Scott Hauser. Speaker 500:09:18Thank you, Paulie, and good morning, everyone. As a result of a strong quarter for revenue before fuel surcharges and other pass throughs, free cash flow continued to support the investment and growth opportunities that Jamie referred to in his prepared comments, and Cargojet continued to create value for our shareholders. In the quarter, Cargojet continued to strengthen its balance sheet with a reduction in leverage as defined by debt compared to EBITDA. Adjusted earnings per share closed the quarter at $1.48 compared to $0.15 per share in the same period in the prior year. Cargojet's strong 3rd quarter has contributed to year to date adjusted earnings per share of $3.59 compared to $1.71 for the prior year. Speaker 500:10:06A few comments regarding our capital allocation. A total of $157,000,000 has been returned to shareholders to repurchase and cancel common shares since the current share back program started in November 2023, with $38,000,000 taking place in the Q3 of this year. Approximately $22,000,000 of capital was allocated for investment in growth CapEx in the Q3 for the 2 Boeing 767s that are currently going through the passenger to freighter conversion process. At this time, we anticipate that Cargojet will close off the 2024 fiscal year with $70,000,000 to $80,000,000 in growth CapEx. This range is slightly higher than what has been communicated earlier in the year due to growth revenue coming on at a faster pace than what was originally anticipated. Speaker 500:10:59When you consider total CapEx, which includes both maintenance CapEx and proceeds from disposal, management anticipates we will finish the year with net capital expenditures between $80,000,000 $90,000,000 To close off the capital allocation update, with all things considered, Cargojet was successful in lowering financial leverage to 2.2x in the 3rd quarter. We started the year at 2.6x. This reduction was made possible with both an increase in 12 month trailing EBITDA of approximately $20,000,000 and a $70,000,000 reduction in debt. I will now touch on the 3rd quarter financial statements. A couple of comments about revenue. Speaker 500:11:41With a 60% increase in the charter business, the company has experienced a mix change in our revenue. The charter business is made up of 2 types of charters, and the mix between the two have been consistent prior to the Q3. The first type of charter revenue is our ad hoc charter business. These opportunities typically present themselves only with a few days' notice. Given the urgency and the non routine nature, these charters typically have a more attractive revenue per block hour, which is required due to the higher operating costs. Speaker 500:12:16The second type of charter revenue is what we refer to as scheduled charters. The recent e commerce growth where merchants are shipping to consumers directly out of China is a long term commitment that is high volume with a consistent schedule. This type of charter revenue has a lower revenue per block hour compared to the other end of the spectrum with the ad hoc charters. Given the different cost structure, both types of charter business meet Cargojet's margin requirements. For a deeper dive into our cost structure. Speaker 500:12:48At a high level, we manage direct expenses on a cost per block hour basis. For direct expenses, we exclude non cash depreciation due to the long term strategic nature of this expense and we exclude fuel expense as we are kept whole on fuel expense with our revenue. With this redefined definition of direct expenses per block hour, Cargojet experienced a slight reduction in the Q3 compared to prior year. Under normal circumstances, operating leverage from the 15% increase in revenue would result in a more significant improvement to margin. To the credit of the entire Cargojet team, the organization can move quickly to support long term growth opportunities. Speaker 500:13:33Cargojet has experienced one time startup costs to onboard this accelerated growth. The best example would be the training and overtime for pilots. It can take as long as 6 months to attract, train and release a fully trained pilot to the line. Cargojet is currently approximately 50 pilots short of an optimized flight crew resourcing level. Our engaged workforce is equally as passionate to support our customers with a temporary overtime to backfill for these vacant positions. Speaker 500:14:07There are 2 specific variances in direct expenses I would like to address. Depreciation closed the quarter at 31 $2,000,000 compared to $42,000,000 for the same period last year. The reduction was driven by 2 different reasons. The first reason is that certain assets have become fully depreciated in the last 12 months. It is coming up on 1 year since the last time that Cargojet added a freighter to our fleet. Speaker 500:14:33If you go back 12 months ago, we had indicated that we had 4 Boeing 757s listed for sale. With the growth in revenue, these 4 aircraft are booked to capacity, which has made it possible to grow revenue without adding aircraft and new depreciation. The second reason for the change in depreciation is a change in estimate for the useful life of our engines. You will notice that Cargojet's maintenance CapEx has been reduced for the last 18 months. Part of the reason was a reduction in spare engine inventory and part of the reason is the fact that our engines estimated life is longer than what was previously estimated. Speaker 500:15:14Selling, general and administrative expenses closed the quarter at $24,300,000 compared to $15,200,000 last year, an increase of $9,000,000 Approximately $1,000,000 of this increase is due to a foreign exchange gain in the previous year. Other SG and A costs have increased by $3,000,000 mostly due to an increase in operating costs related to IT for software and for outside professional service providers. The remaining $5,000,000 increase compared to prior year relates to an increase in salaries and incentives. Salaries have increased due to the 2023 inflation. Vacant positions have been filled from this time last year. Speaker 500:15:55Given the uncertainty of the freight recession that we were managing through last year, employees did not qualify for incentive last year. We are now back to a normal run rate on salaries and incentives in 2024. As Jamie noted, it should also be taken into consideration the number of operating days in a given quarter. The Q3 in 2024 had one less operating day. The number of operating days impacts the majority of our revenue. Speaker 500:16:22With the current run rate of revenue per operating day, one less operating day compared to the prior year can impact EBITDA over $1,000,000 With the increase in revenue and with our current cost structure, Cargojet closed the 3rd quarter with $47,800,000 in free cash flow compared to $29,800,000 in the same period for prior year for an increase of approximately $20,000,000 In closing, it was 1 year ago that we announced our long term strategy as it relates to our capital allocation. Cargojet's long term capital allocation strategy continues to deliver consistent dividend growth. We're investing in growth opportunities that meet our margin requirements. We've maintained a conservative balance sheet as measured by debt to EBITDA, and we're opportunistically buying back shares. We are pleased with the progress we have made on each of these pillars. Speaker 500:17:16I will now pass it back to Jamie and Pauline and Ajay for any questions. Speaker 400:17:24Operator, would you like to? Operator00:17:26Yes. Thank you. So we will now take questions from the telephone line. The first question is from Matthew Lee from Canaccord. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:17:54Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. On the domestic side, revenue growth this quarter was maybe a bit slower than Q2. Can you just maybe talk about what trends you're seeing that give you some confidence in further acceleration for Q4 and any color you're getting from customers around the holiday season? Speaker 200:18:11Yes, good morning, Matthew. It's Jamie. Thanks for joining us this morning. Yes, it was a little it was kind of in line with what we had predicted back at the beginning of the year in terms of revenue growth. I think a couple of factors that impacted it. Speaker 200:18:231, as Scott mentioned, 1 less operating day in the quarter certainly had an impact. 2, there is some domestic revenue that includes fuel surcharge component and with lower fuel costs, we had lower fuel surcharge revenue included in that base domestic revenue. I think that was one factor. But the indications from domestic customers for peak season going into Q4 and what we've already seen in the month of October remains strong. As I noted before, we have additional charter opportunity not charter opportunities, we have additional peak scheduled charters from several customers this season that were stronger than last season. Speaker 200:19:00So we should have a good peak season in terms of domestic revenue. Speaker 600:19:07That's fair. And then maybe on fleet, 15% block hour growth this quarter on non aircraft, that's very impressive. And I think the fleet plan only has one net additional aircraft next year. But Q4 kind of shakes out the way you're expecting and it seems like signs of the demand is pretty buoyant. Should we be expecting you guys to look at adding to your fleet? Speaker 600:19:26Or is there kind Speaker 300:19:27of still more IFCs out of your current aircraft? Speaker 200:19:29No. We have some we have flexibility in the fleet and you are right, 15% is impressive and I think that coincides with what we said at the beginning of the year that we were confident that we could grow our business 15% to 20% with the existing fleet of aircraft and in the 1st 3 quarters we've demonstrated that we have that capability plus a little bit more. We do have 2 aircraft coming into the fleet in 2025, 2 767-300s. You're correct that it's net 1 if we return the leased aircraft or only leased aircraft that's term ends in the end of February. But we still have some flexibility on whether we keep that aircraft to meet our growing needs or not. Speaker 300:20:08One of the things that it's A. J, A. J, the more we fly, the less maintenance time we have on the existing fleet. And Cargojet's key success factor has been on time performance. And when you have maintenance that cannot be performed because aircraft are always flying, you will always be behind on your maintenance, which we don't like. Speaker 300:20:34And that affects our on time performance. So although it's good to get a utilization, max utilization of any aircraft, but we want to make sure that we have enough aircraft in our fleet that can go into maintenance while the other ones are flying. So it's a balancing act. And as Jamie said, we do have an option to bring on an extra aircraft in the New Year, early New Year. And anytime we have taken these aircraft for maintenance, they end up being both aircraft. Speaker 300:21:11So we're not too worried if we add an aircraft, I'm sure it will be gone. But I think our biggest concern right now is to make sure that aircraft get the required maintenance routine and heavy checks at appropriate times to ensure there's a safe working environment and also that our on time performance stays where it should Speaker 700:21:41be. Operator00:21:46Thank you. The next question is from Kamran Dorksan from NBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:21:52Yes. Thanks. Good morning. Just want to ask a question about the, I guess, the China flights, obviously, very strong growth in the all in charter line item. You mentioned that you've seen some increases in frequency, I guess, more recently. Speaker 800:22:07Can you just talk about how that contract is evolving? How you see that kind of evolving further in the next couple of quarters? Speaker 200:22:15Yes. Good morning, Cameron. As you know, when we started that program back in May, initially the revenue forecast related to that business was about $55,000,000 to $60,000,000 per year based on 3 frequencies per week. We have seen an increase in those frequencies up to 5 or 6 frequencies per week in the Q4, but that will return back. Our expectation is that's peak demand and will return back to the contractual minimum of 3 flights per week going into 2025. Speaker 800:22:46Okay. That's helpful. And then maybe my second question is just around, I guess, the optimization of some of the controllable costs, it's something you mentioned in the prepared remarks as well. Can you just maybe detail a little bit about what measures that are yet to be done here that will, I guess, optimize your cost structure in the next few quarters? Speaker 300:23:09Maybe I'll take that one, Caleb. The cost structure, it's a strange situation. While we try to manage the internal costs and get efficiencies, we're not immune to the cost settlements and the wage settlements are going on in the industry. WestJet did a maintenance contract. They did a pilot contract. Speaker 300:23:34Air Canada did a pilot contract. Across the border, there are pilot contracts. A lot of our spare parts come from the U. S. Where the lead settlements have been 30%, 40% plus. Speaker 300:23:46So all these are reflecting all going to be start reflecting in a lot of the requirements we have. So while we do certainly manage it very efficiently and we don't spend the dollar when we don't need to, but the industry, as you can see that how many strikes have happened and how many when you look at Canada Post almost ready to strike and the federal workers and everybody else, the pressures continue on positive as well. And we are also part of the whole logistics chain and supply chain and it attracts us as well. Speaker 800:24:32Okay. But are there, I guess, specific measures you can point to on the cost side that are elevated right now, but you have some ability to reduce those to offset some of the other escalating costs? Speaker 300:24:45Not very much from the industry standpoint, but gaining efficiencies through extra flying and doing consolidation of some of the routes, rerouting the aircraft. Those are the kind of things that we always look at how we get the work of 15 hours of flying at 12 hours. Those are the kind of things we internally always looking at daily basis. Speaker 200:25:13Okay. And if I could just add to A. J. Comments, Cameron, a couple of things. In terms of overtime with the pilots, that will level out as we add more crew to our line. Speaker 200:25:24But as A. J. Said, we're facing some headwinds Speaker 500:25:27in Speaker 200:25:27the future, not just with the pilot group, but with a number of different employee groups in terms of wage increases. We've had some significant and long overdue permanent headcount additions, particularly to the senior and executive management team that were lacking in certain areas. And also factor in the Canadian dollar is trading at the lowest level against the U. S. Dollar in over 4 years. Speaker 200:25:50And as you're aware, a lot of our costs are in U. S. Dollars. So all of those things sort of impact in the longer term. Speaker 800:25:56Right. Okay. That's very helpful. Thanks very much. Operator00:26:01Thank you. The next question is from Chris Murray from ACB Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:26:08Yes, thanks folks. Good morning. Maybe just turning back to the costs in the quarter. You did mention that there were sort of some one time costs around the increase in the block hours. Can you maybe try to help us quantify exactly how much that was in the quarter? Speaker 600:26:29I know there's some puts and takes and I know you called out some items, but any additional color would be helpful. Speaker 300:26:35Well, the additional costs mostly come from, as you know, we have 70 pilots. We are looking at the market condition, just take the pilots for example. We should have about 4 50 pilots, which is our ideal cost. But the market is such that there is a pilot shortage. The bottom 100 is the one that rotate. Speaker 300:27:02And every time a pilot rotates, there is a $50,000 to $70,000 in training cost because these guys take 3 to 4 months. Speaker 900:27:11By the Speaker 300:27:11time they're hired, they come online, they get trained, they get released, it's 5, 6, 7 months. And since there are backlog of training, that even adds further to the cost. So these are the kind of the one time costs where a pilot is not productive because they have the trainings to go through. And secondly, these guys are hard to find right now because there is a shortage. So we continue to work and manage because we can't turn down any business. Speaker 300:27:42So a lot of business that you see today, we carry we have to carry down over time. And that cost us a lot of money. So this is a kind of example that one time cost. We always call it one time cost, but if you every year you've got 50, 60, 70 pilots leave, they become permanent costs until the market stabilizes that there is plenty of pilots in the market place. So some of these challenges, Chris, are definitely the industry challenges, just not ours, but we try to manage it as much as we can. Speaker 600:28:20Okay. And then the other question I had is just in terms of with the existing fleet. Jamie, you made the comment about kind of 15% to 20% kind of growth on utility, on utilization, which kind of almost puts you at the far end. But we've also talked a lot in the past about being able to find different ways to optimize a fleet, whether that's daytime flying or weekend flying. As you sort of took the fleet out to, I guess, maybe what you would be thinking about would have been your MAX. Speaker 600:28:57Are there any other opportunities, either in fleet mix or the way that you operate the network to maybe find some additional capacity without having to add additional aircraft? Speaker 200:29:14Good morning, Chris. It's Jamie. No, we're pretty happy with the fleet mix that we have. I mean, with the one of the things that's very it's almost transparent to people, but it's from a cost standpoint very efficient is the fleet mix that we have with the 757, the 767, the common flight deck, pilots being able to interchange between new aircraft seamlessly both from an operational standpoint. And obviously, they were checked out on both aircraft types equally. Speaker 200:29:41So we don't have specific crews for specific aircraft that makes us or aircraft types that makes us very efficient. And we manage that on a literally on a daily basis, particularly with the domestic network. We have more control over the domestic flying and the volumes are more we control the volume not we control the volumes, but we control the capacity and can match the capacity to the volumes more closely than we would look at on the ACMI or the charter as an example. Speaker 900:30:14Okay. I'll leave it there. Thanks, folks. Operator00:30:16Thanks, Chris. Thank you. The next question is from Konark Gupta from Scotiabank. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:30:25Thanks, operator. Good morning. I just want to follow-up on the cost discussion here. In Q3, you guys had a pretty decent 33.5% margin, which is kind of very consistent with the last 2.5 years or so. I'm thinking like if you normalize for these the upfront costs, you talked about that normalizes probably in the first half of twenty twenty five. Speaker 900:30:52What's the margin on a normalized rate looking like? Like are we close to 35% or are we close to 34%? Speaker 200:31:00No. Sorry. Yes. One comment before Speaker 400:31:04I turn it Speaker 300:31:05over to Jamie. That those costs that we talked about in the 2nd are only going to stabilize if the market stabilize and there is the demand for the pilots come down or there's plenty of them. As I've said that these costs, when you have the turnover kind of we do in any sort of airline where people leave for other opportunities or they don't want to fly cargo or they don't fly at night, they go into other operations. It's very difficult that we can say, we always call it one time cost for now. But if market in 2025, the passenger, the way it has grown continues to grow, those one time costs will continue for a period of time till the market stabilizes. Speaker 300:31:58So I just wanted to make that clear that by 2025, these are not magically going to disappear. That's an industry issue that we not us, but every airline is facing. Speaker 1000:32:10So I Speaker 300:32:10just wanted to make that clear. Speaker 200:32:12And just to add to Ajay's comments, Konark, I think we would agree and I think most people on this call would the expectation would be with the level of revenue growth that we have even with some one time costs that at some point that levels out and you'll see an increase in the historical margins that we've been able to generate for this business. And I think in a normal world that would that logic would apply. And those costs will normalize over the next year, year and a half. But I think the point is that we believe that those are being more than offset by other permanent increases, whether it's facing the wage increases that we talked about with various parts of our organization, various employee groups, certainly adding headcount that were, as I mentioned before, were long overdue. Those are permanent costs, the impact of the U. Speaker 200:33:03S. Dollar. I think all of those things would lead us to an expectation that we're not those EBITDA that 33.5 EBITDA margin is not going to increase substantially in the next few years. In fact, it might actually decrease. But having said that, we're still very confident that that's going to meet our capital allocation requirements. Speaker 200:33:22We're still going to generate enough free cash flow to meet our short and long term CapEx requirements and certainly to continue our priorities of dividend payments to shareholders and share buybacks and continuing to keep our debt level at 2x to 2.2x EBITDA. Speaker 300:33:41And Konark, I must add that anything that keeps us up right now is the past pressures to not only us, but the whole industry and whole supply chain sector, whole logistics sectors face, whether it's Canada Post or whether it was UPS who had a settlement or whether it was VLADEL who recently had a settlement. So this is not an issue that is just for cargo jet. This is an industry issue and we are part of the industry. And if that that is our biggest challenge today is the creeping costs. Speaker 900:34:16Okay. No, that makes sense. Thanks guys. And in terms of capacity, I think Jamie, you pointed out earlier on that initially you guys were looking at 15%, 20% sort of increase in block hours without adding the fleet. Now Q3 you had 15% growth in block hours on the same fleet essentially. Speaker 900:34:35How much more capacity for that on the existing fleet? So the next two aircraft that you get in 2025, that will increase the capacity maybe, but on the current fleet, can you squeeze out more block outs? Speaker 200:34:48We will in the Q4 for peak season. And I think it's consistent with what we said at the beginning of the year that we felt very confident that we could grow revenues by 15% to 20% with the existing fleet that we have. And I think growing it to 15% in the last quarter is a demonstration of our capability to do that. I think as we said, it was 15% to 20%, so we're not at 20% yet. So there is a little bit of growth and that's why we're very and we're very we have the flexibility going in, as I mentioned earlier, going into 2025 with 2 additional aircraft coming sometime towards the end of the second or Q1, Q2 of the year and providing the flexibility to whether we keep the leased aircraft or not keep the leased aircraft, we still have some time. Speaker 200:35:32We'll make that decision before the end of the year, but we're very confident that that we'll have enough capacity to continue to grow at that level if demand is there. Speaker 900:35:40Okay. That's great. Thanks. And last one for me before I turn over. Maybe I don't know if AG you'd like to comment on that, but Canada Post has been going through obviously these issues, which are very public, obviously and their employees are I think, looking like they're against the weekend deliveries and all that. Speaker 900:35:59How do you see all these issues shaping up? And how does it impact your existing contractual agreements with Canada Post? So any thoughts there? Yes. So Speaker 300:36:11we do have a long term contract with Canada Post and we don't see any of this labor issues impacting Speaker 400:36:19our kind Speaker 300:36:20of business that they do with us because a lot of it's parcel, not the letter mail and all that stuff they do with us. The key thing is that if you're looking at, they don't want to do 7 days delivery and they don't want to do this. What we will find is that if Canada Post wants to be profitable or even breakeven or be competitive with the others, which they are mandated to do, by the way, they did their charter, they have to be self sufficient. And I know they're losing $700,000,000 $800,000,000 $900,000,000 a year. They will have to be competitive with UPS, DHL and FedEx for their parcel delivery or even their own subsidiary, a furolator. Speaker 300:37:10Being their customers, I can't give them advice or be I'm just giving you this as a general reader that in order for them to meet the wage demands that they're being asked of, they will have to increase productivity to become profitable. You cannot give wage increases to any group of people when productivity is being asked to be reduced. So if their mandate is truly that they have to be self sufficient and they cannot get financing from the government purses, then something has to give. The other option is that if they don't want to do that, maybe they should go to 2 days of delivering a mail or 3 days or cut back in services. So some of these things need to happen. Speaker 300:38:06Otherwise, Canada Post, it's in all of our interest to see that Canada Post makes some kind of money that it's not dependent on public persons. Speaker 900:38:17Great. That's great color. Appreciate the time as always. Thank you. Operator00:38:23Thank you. The next question is from Walter Spracklin from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:38:30Yes. Thanks very much, operator. Good morning, everyone. I want to start on the charter run rate now, and I know there's always some fluctuations in charter as sometimes domestic or ACMI borrows some capacity from your charter opportunity during your peak. And I'm just curious whether what the run rate now is on the charter, It's lifted a lot this year and is now north of $40,000,000 per quarter. Speaker 1100:38:59Do we look at that as the run rate $40,000,000 now each quarter going forward? Does it dip down in the 4th quarter? Is perhaps there's some borrowing from capacity? And maybe just the quarterly run rate on your very successful all in charter revenue piece would be appreciated here. Speaker 200:39:17Yes. Good morning, Walter. I think the expectation would be expectation would be exactly as you described that even though we have increased frequencies with our scheduled and just to clarify, we group both the scheduled, what we call scheduled charter, which is mostly the China flying that we are doing and our ad hoc charter revenue together in the same bucket. But you're correct, in the Q4, we see an increase in scheduled frequencies per week that we're doing to and from China, as I mentioned earlier. We have seen very strong ad hoc charter in the month of October, but as we get towards the end of Q4, particularly in December, the availability of aircraft and crew for continued ad hoc charter flying will probably be muted a little bit. Speaker 200:39:59So I think that the Q4 will be similar to the Q3, but going into 2025, again, we'll see a reduction. Our expectation right now is it will go back to the normal three frequencies per week on the scheduled flying, scheduled charter flying and ad hoc charter demand will be a little lower than we've seen in Q3 and Q4 going into the beginning of the year. Speaker 1100:40:23Okay. And in terms of your revenue per block hour, that was trending up and then took a dip. And I know, Scott, you mentioned there's some mix in there. I guess it comes like, first of all, is that dip, the new mix we should kind of model a decline in Raizen per Block L going forward to reflect that kind of new mix? And my second question is, and I know there's a lot of cost discussions, you're in a pretty good competitive environment. Speaker 1100:40:57To what extent can you just turn around now and say, look, cost pressure is pretty high and we're going to have to pass it on to our own customers. How do those conversations go? Speaker 300:41:08So Walter, let me take that quickly. I don't know if you just talked about cost pressures this morning. Boeing settled for 38% increases. So this is the kind of industry has been paying and it's been going on. So these pressures are definitely spread to from Boeing to Airlines to Aerospace Industries to Automobile. Speaker 300:41:34So you can keep talking about that. But just keep one thing in mind that if we were just competing for charters in Canada, I could agree with you that we would have the pricing power and we could probably get some better yields. But when the charters come in, 90% of our charters we are competing with companies in the U. S. And if we're not competitive with their pricing, they tend to how do I put it? Speaker 300:42:10Because there is so much pressure in capacity like UPS is chartering planes because they got too many. FedEx is chartering planes because they had too many. DHL is always chartering planes when they have the extra capacity. ATSD and Atlas there and Kalida, they also charter planes. So we are not just competing on the Canadian landscape when it comes to any charter, whether it's Canada, U. Speaker 300:42:34S. Or U. S. To other countries or Canada to other countries, we always have 3 or 4 or 5 competitors on each of those charters. So we do not contain the pricing power. Speaker 300:42:49We have to be competitive Speaker 500:42:50with those companies. Walter, the other thing to add revenue per block hour is there's been a steady decline in the price of fuel ever since Q3 last year. We saw that big pop a year ago and then it's been a very slow and steady decline ever since then. So a lot of our revenue does have fuel baked into that revenue as well, right? The fuel surcharge is just for domestic. Speaker 500:43:12So all that other revenue, you're going to see some noise there with the change of price of fuel. Speaker 1100:43:16Okay. That's great. I really appreciate the time. Operator00:43:26The next question is from Kevin Chiang from CIBC. Speaker 1000:43:35Maybe if I could just put a finer point on how block hours look in Q4. If I look at 2022 and 2023, I think sequentially you saw block hours up, let's say about 10 percent, I mean that was obviously in the face of a freight recession. Is that the type of sequential increase you'd expect this peak season or do we go back to something like you saw in prior years where you could see 15%, 20% plus sequential improvement in block hours? Speaker 200:44:07No, I don't think good morning, Kevin. I don't think it's of that magnitude. You're definitely going to see sequentially an increase in block hours. The big part of it will be driven by the additional frequencies that we have flying to and from China that we didn't have in those previous 2 years in 2023 2022. But we're also seeing strong demand in the Q4 with additional aircraft that we have flying primarily for DHL on an ACMI basis as well as I noted before some additional peak charters we're doing for our domestic customers. Speaker 300:44:37And Kevin, you will also see an increase in block hours because if you remember we had said that we have 4 757s parked that are being utilized. So when we can't find the 767, we fire 2,757, which increases the block hours a bit. So that number might not be fully up to speed because we when we don't turn down business and if it's profitable, we will put 2 aircraft instead of 1. So that does increase the block hours a bit. Speaker 1000:45:12That's helpful color. And maybe just my second question here on the pilot situation. It feels like it's been pretty fluid, like things were tight a while ago, and then we've had a few airlines here in Canada go under on the ultra low cost carrier side. That seemed to alleviate some of the pilot pressure, but it seems like maybe we've come full circle here where supply demand for pilots has gone tighter. 1, is that what you're seeing? Speaker 1000:45:46And then 2, just wondering if some of the more recent headwinds in hiring, are you talking that up to some of the recent, I guess, pilot contracts that have been signed effectively WestJet Air Canada total compensation has increased whatever the 30%, 40% over the term of the contract. Is that making it tougher to has that made it significantly tighter in the short period of time in getting pilots just with these new contracts being ratified? Speaker 300:46:17Yes. So a number of things there play a factor in the pilots issue. A lot of our pilots seem to be going flying for South. They're flying in U. S. Speaker 300:46:28To pay in U. S. Dollars and the single guys don't care where they fly. So there's a lot of being pilots that are moving to the South. The second part of it is, while the wage increases have gone 35%, 40% or even more in some of the airlines, the work rules and the productivity hasn't kept up. Speaker 300:46:49So they're giving more money, but they're also hiring more pilots because some of the work rules have not are not product increase in productivity. So you get two factors. One is that you got more money getting in other airlines. And the second thing is you also have less productivity. That means you need if you needed 50 pilots to do a job, you might need 60 or 70 to do the job. Speaker 300:47:21So that those are some of the things that are today's reality. And the other part of it, you should also keep in mind that when links went into CCAA or bankruptcy, they had a few 100 pilots that came on and they were absorbed within like a week. So we don't have an excess pilot, especially when you have a number of Canadian carriers that have beefed up operations, Canada has got more flights than WestJet has got a lot of flights, Sunwing, Polar Airline is a full blown airline, Flair has expanded. So if you look at all the pilots that were there like prior to COVID, we will find that the number of pilots have gone up 30%, 40%, 50% from where they used to be. The country is only producing so many pilots. Speaker 300:48:17There's no emphasis on producing had any increase in output to get the pilots trained and out of the line. And whatever we are producing, we are losing a fair bit to U. S. We are losing a fair bit to companies like Emirates overseas, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines, Cathay, Korean. So there's a lot of Canadian pilots who choose not to fly in this country. Speaker 1000:48:55That's very helpful color. Thank you very much and best of luck this peak season. Speaker 300:48:59Thank you, Kevin. Operator00:49:02Thank you. The next question is from Scott Carscallen from MacKenzie Investments. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:49:09Good morning and thanks for taking my call. In the event that we get a Trump presidency announcement tomorrow and he embarks on what he says he's going to embark on with tariffs that is 10% to 20% tariffs on everything coming into the U. S. And 60% tariffs for all goods coming in from China. Just wondering, how do you see that kind of event impacting your businesses? Speaker 600:49:33I'm thinking in particular ACMI and Charter. Thank you. Speaker 200:49:38Thanks, Scott. It's Jamie. I'll give you some comments on that. I mean, we we're well aware of that. I mean, the one thing that we're optimistic about and was very encouraging with our agreement with our Chinese customer is they're focused on the only the Canadian market and not the U. Speaker 200:49:53S. Market at all. So I think any impact of Trump presidency with increased tariffs on imports into the U. S. Will have less of an impact on our business that we're doing directly with some of the Chinese e commerce companies that are focusing more on Canada. Speaker 200:50:12Equally on the charter business, our charter our ad hoc charter business is certainly global. Most of the business is around the world. It's not specific to the U. S, it's not specific it's certainly not specific to Canada at all. We do very little domestic ad hoc charters. Speaker 200:50:25Most of them are global to Europe to other parts of Asia. Very little coming back into the U. S. It's usually between other third and fourth countries or between Canada and the third country. We're not concerned with a major impact to that. Speaker 200:50:39On an ACMI basis, certainly with the exposure that we have with DHL, at DHL, we operate 17 or 18 aircraft on an ACMI basis for them. We're not currently operating any aircraft for them out of Asia into the U. S. I don't think there'd be any impact there. Speaker 900:50:57Okay, that's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:50:59Thanks. Thank you. The next question is from Tim James from TD Speaker 700:51:10Cowen. My first question, just wondering if you saw any signs of pull forward of peak season or Q4 volumes into the Q3 from any of your customers or business lines? Speaker 200:51:25I'd say a little bit at the tail end of the Q3. In September, we had a very strong September year over year in terms of volume on all really on all three segments of the business. We saw increased activity, increased flying on an ACMI basis, particularly for DHL during September, which continues into the Q4. Equally, we started to see a little bit of the ramp up of the Chinese flying, not quite at the level that it's at today in October, November, but a little bit and certainly our ad hoc charter business in September started to pick up and was very strong in October. Speaker 700:52:01Okay. And then I guess the follow-up to that is you were providing some commentary earlier with regards to Q3 charter, Q4 charter looking sort of equally strong for a number of reasons and then the typical seasonal kind of slower revenue run rate in the 1st and second quarters. What about Q3 next year? Maybe the broader question is, is this Q3 now kind of the new baseline do you think for the Q3, Putting aside any potential natural growth or economic influences, but is this kind of the starting point as you would see it for next year in Q3 or were there some particular headwinds or tailwinds that maybe not are not necessarily normal for future years? Speaker 200:52:42Yes, I think it's maybe a little premature now at this point, Tim, to be able to accurately predict what Q3 next year is going to look like. We did have sort of significant almost record growth in ad hoc charter during the quarter. Does that continue? I mean, a lot of that is driven, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, by global sort of geopolitical impact of things in the Ukraine, things in the Middle East, different disasters around the world. It's hard to predict whether those will continue and that portion of it continue to drive ad hoc charter opportunities or growth next year. Speaker 200:53:15Equally, the growth of e commerce that we're seeing both on the domestic and on our international business, I think will continue, but I think it's a little early for us to be able to predict that accurately for next a year from now. Speaker 700:53:29Okay. Fair enough. Thanks very much. Operator00:53:33Thank you, Fin. Thank you.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCargojet Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsInterim report Cargojet Earnings HeadlinesSmall caps to watch: Cargojet, Well Health, Mullen Group and moreApril 17 at 10:42 AM | theglobeandmail.comWe Like These Underlying Return On Capital Trends At Cargojet (TSE:CJT)April 15, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSomething strange going on at Mar-a-LagoA former government advisor says a $9 trillion AI breakthrough is nearing launch. It may become America’s biggest advantage in the race against China — and a handful of Musk-linked companies could benefit.April 20, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)CIBC Lowers Cargojet (TSE:CJT) Price Target to C$150.00April 12, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comTSX Stocks on Sale: 2 High-Quality Stocks to Buy After the Recent CorrectionMarch 21, 2025 | msn.comCargojet (TSE:CJT) investors are sitting on a loss of 40% if they invested three years agoMarch 13, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Cargojet Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Cargojet? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Cargojet and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CargojetCargojet (TSE:CJT) Inc operates a domestic air cargo co-load network between sixteen major Canadian cities. The company provides dedicated aircraft to customers on an Aircraft, Crew, Maintenance and Insurance basis, operating between points in Canada, USA, Mexico and Europe. The company also operates scheduled international routes for multiple cargo customers between the USA and Bermuda, between Canada, UK and Germany; and between Canada and Mexico.View Cargojet ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Archer Aviation Unveils NYC Network Ahead of Key Earnings Report3 Reasons to Like the Look of Amazon Ahead of EarningsTesla Stock Eyes Breakout With Earnings on DeckJohnson & Johnson Earnings Were More Good Than Bad—Time to Buy? 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Cargojet Conference Call. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Martin Hermann, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:11Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning on this call. With me on the call this morning are A. J. Vermoni, Carvedis' Executive Chairman Pauline Dillon and Jamie Porteous, our Co Chief Executive Officers Scott Calver, our Chief Financial Officer and Sanjeet Maeni, our Vice President, Finance. After opening remarks about the quarter, we will open the call for questions. Speaker 100:00:35I would like to point out that certain statements made on this call, such as those relating to our forecasted revenues, costs and strategic plans, are forward looking within the meaning of applicable securities laws. This call also includes references to non GAAP measures like adjusted EBITDA, adjusted earnings per share and return on invested capital. Please refer to our most recent press release and MD and A for important assumptions and cautionary statements relating to forward looking information and for a reconciliation of any non GAAP measures to GAAP income. I will now turn the call over to Jamie. Speaker 200:01:09Thanks, Marty. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on the call today. As we've done in the prior quarters, Pauline and I will share our prepared remarks before we pass the call over to our CFO, Scott, to give you a little bit more color on the financial drivers this quarter. Let me start by contrasting the macro transportation sector with Cargojet's recent performance. The transportation sector across North America continues to be challenged with weak domestic volumes and the industry has been slow to recover from the ongoing freight recession. Speaker 200:01:39However, Speaker 300:01:39when you Speaker 200:01:40look at Cargojet's results, you will notice that we are successfully turning challenges into opportunities. Let me give you a few examples that differentiate Cargojet from the norm. 1, with the recent high inflation and an economic slowdown in North America, consumers embraced ultra low cost products from China based direct to consumer merchants using new platforms like TIMU and Shen. This dampened the domestic e commerce volumes, but created a new stream of China to North America air cargo opportunity for Cargojet. We were on the forefront of this shift and secured a long term scheduled charter opportunity that we announced earlier this year between China and Canada. Speaker 200:02:20The frequencies flown per week on this route have continued to rise over the past few months to meet demand. 2, the geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and Ukraine have created supply chain opportunities and an increased need for air cargo services. More recently, the threat of a port worker strike at the East Coast also forced large retailers and manufacturers to think about alternative plans. These disruptions have created new ad hoc charter opportunities on several global routes with available aircraft capacity, we have been proactive in identifying key commodities that need to fly and adding to our ad hoc charter volumes. As a result, we posted very strong 15% growth in overall revenues and a 17% growth in adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. Speaker 200:03:09This was despite one less operating day in Q3, 2024 versus Q3 of the prior year. We have consistently been diversifying our business from both the product offering point of view as well as from geographic coverage. This combination has provided us with a solid foundation to create predictable earnings and cash flows for our shareholders. In the quarter, domestic revenues grew by 5.2%, ACMI posted a 12% gain and all in charters posted a record 60.2% growth versus the Q3 of 2023. Overall, we posted a 14.8% increase in revenues for the quarter as compared to the previous year. Speaker 200:03:51The improving interest rate environment and controlled inflation are fostering a more stable and optimistic economic outlook for Canada, which we believe bodes well for future domestic volumes. I talked about our decision to accelerate growth investment in 2767-three 100 aircraft during our last quarter remarks. Based on our current growth rate and opportunities we see emerging in 2025, we are confident in our fleet expansion strategy, particularly in the context of reductions in other Canadian freight operators, aircraft freighter fleets and available air cargo capacity and the emerging long range charter opportunities. We are also pleased to note that our growth CapEx was well within our stated goals on capital allocation and we are very happy with the progress we are making in our capital allocation strategy. We remain disciplined on optimizing CapEx and generating free cash flow, including a framework on how we will allocate capital through dividends, share buybacks and debt reduction. Speaker 200:04:53Although I should point out that we are not immune to the cost headwinds facing the aviation and overall supply chain sectors relating specifically to wages and other cost increases, which may impact future margins. However, this will not deter us from our capital allocation priorities. Scott will provide more color on how we are progressing against these objectives. We are also encouraged to see stronger peak season volume forecast from the majority of our customers and we are well positioned to serve our customers through this most important shopping season of the year. Pauline and I continue to work together on building growth opportunities, attracting the best talent and staying focused on operational and cost efficiency. Speaker 200:05:34We have recently and will continue to strengthen the talent in information technology, cybersecurity, finance and flight operations areas to meet our growing business requirements. We are very excited and confident about the continued growth opportunities that lie ahead for Cargojet, its employees and our shareholders. Let me now pass the microphone over to my colleague, Pauline. Speaker 400:05:56Thank you, Jamie. The growth opportunities that Jamie mentioned require a capital light execution strategy. In other words, grow our block hours without adding aircraft CapEx, and that's been our biggest priority. We have been focused on carefully orchestrating various pieces of our operations to allow us to maximize our fleet utilization, particularly given the complexity of serving Asia routes and the global reach of our ad hoc charter activity. We have a very predictable requirement for our aircraft fleet to support our Canadian overnight network and our ACMI business. Speaker 400:06:40Utilizing spare aircraft availability for charter opportunities is key to creating additional shareholder value. We are pleased to see that many of these pieces came together nicely during this quarter. As a result, Q3 block hours grew 15% with the same size of aircraft fleet that we had last year. To execute this strategy, we are still scaling up some cost areas and expect to reach a more normalized run rate in the first half of twenty twenty five. We continued our efforts to build strong talent and capabilities in our information technology functions. Speaker 400:07:22This is an 18 to 24 month journey, but it is critical to manage scale and complexity of the business and to build the foundation for future growth. We continue to add talent in other key areas of the business as well. Our fleet planning will be more robust and complex this year, given both the domestic as well as Asia networks. We have dedicated teams that work with key customers to ensure we deliver every single package on time for the holiday peak season. Our operations and safety teams are focused on preparing for all weather conditions. Speaker 400:08:01Our maintenance teams are focused on making sure that our aircraft as well as our ground handling equipment are fully serviceable at each base. Once again, in Q3, we delivered leading best in class on time performance of 98.7%. This is the single most important metric that our customers judge us by. We want to acknowledge and thank every member of the Cargojet team for their commitment to delivering the best customer experience and for their continued dedication. Jamie and I transitioned into our new roles at the start of this year. Speaker 400:08:40It has been an exciting, and I might add, exhilarating year of growth and opportunity. We are thrilled with the progress that we have made, both on the financial and operating performances of the company, but we do recognize much work still needs to be done. One thing has become very clear to us, there is no shortage of opportunities. We need to build capabilities that can profitably capture those opportunities and continue to provide our customers and our shareholders value. This now concludes my prepared comments, and I will turn the call over to Scott Hauser. Speaker 500:09:18Thank you, Paulie, and good morning, everyone. As a result of a strong quarter for revenue before fuel surcharges and other pass throughs, free cash flow continued to support the investment and growth opportunities that Jamie referred to in his prepared comments, and Cargojet continued to create value for our shareholders. In the quarter, Cargojet continued to strengthen its balance sheet with a reduction in leverage as defined by debt compared to EBITDA. Adjusted earnings per share closed the quarter at $1.48 compared to $0.15 per share in the same period in the prior year. Cargojet's strong 3rd quarter has contributed to year to date adjusted earnings per share of $3.59 compared to $1.71 for the prior year. Speaker 500:10:06A few comments regarding our capital allocation. A total of $157,000,000 has been returned to shareholders to repurchase and cancel common shares since the current share back program started in November 2023, with $38,000,000 taking place in the Q3 of this year. Approximately $22,000,000 of capital was allocated for investment in growth CapEx in the Q3 for the 2 Boeing 767s that are currently going through the passenger to freighter conversion process. At this time, we anticipate that Cargojet will close off the 2024 fiscal year with $70,000,000 to $80,000,000 in growth CapEx. This range is slightly higher than what has been communicated earlier in the year due to growth revenue coming on at a faster pace than what was originally anticipated. Speaker 500:10:59When you consider total CapEx, which includes both maintenance CapEx and proceeds from disposal, management anticipates we will finish the year with net capital expenditures between $80,000,000 $90,000,000 To close off the capital allocation update, with all things considered, Cargojet was successful in lowering financial leverage to 2.2x in the 3rd quarter. We started the year at 2.6x. This reduction was made possible with both an increase in 12 month trailing EBITDA of approximately $20,000,000 and a $70,000,000 reduction in debt. I will now touch on the 3rd quarter financial statements. A couple of comments about revenue. Speaker 500:11:41With a 60% increase in the charter business, the company has experienced a mix change in our revenue. The charter business is made up of 2 types of charters, and the mix between the two have been consistent prior to the Q3. The first type of charter revenue is our ad hoc charter business. These opportunities typically present themselves only with a few days' notice. Given the urgency and the non routine nature, these charters typically have a more attractive revenue per block hour, which is required due to the higher operating costs. Speaker 500:12:16The second type of charter revenue is what we refer to as scheduled charters. The recent e commerce growth where merchants are shipping to consumers directly out of China is a long term commitment that is high volume with a consistent schedule. This type of charter revenue has a lower revenue per block hour compared to the other end of the spectrum with the ad hoc charters. Given the different cost structure, both types of charter business meet Cargojet's margin requirements. For a deeper dive into our cost structure. Speaker 500:12:48At a high level, we manage direct expenses on a cost per block hour basis. For direct expenses, we exclude non cash depreciation due to the long term strategic nature of this expense and we exclude fuel expense as we are kept whole on fuel expense with our revenue. With this redefined definition of direct expenses per block hour, Cargojet experienced a slight reduction in the Q3 compared to prior year. Under normal circumstances, operating leverage from the 15% increase in revenue would result in a more significant improvement to margin. To the credit of the entire Cargojet team, the organization can move quickly to support long term growth opportunities. Speaker 500:13:33Cargojet has experienced one time startup costs to onboard this accelerated growth. The best example would be the training and overtime for pilots. It can take as long as 6 months to attract, train and release a fully trained pilot to the line. Cargojet is currently approximately 50 pilots short of an optimized flight crew resourcing level. Our engaged workforce is equally as passionate to support our customers with a temporary overtime to backfill for these vacant positions. Speaker 500:14:07There are 2 specific variances in direct expenses I would like to address. Depreciation closed the quarter at 31 $2,000,000 compared to $42,000,000 for the same period last year. The reduction was driven by 2 different reasons. The first reason is that certain assets have become fully depreciated in the last 12 months. It is coming up on 1 year since the last time that Cargojet added a freighter to our fleet. Speaker 500:14:33If you go back 12 months ago, we had indicated that we had 4 Boeing 757s listed for sale. With the growth in revenue, these 4 aircraft are booked to capacity, which has made it possible to grow revenue without adding aircraft and new depreciation. The second reason for the change in depreciation is a change in estimate for the useful life of our engines. You will notice that Cargojet's maintenance CapEx has been reduced for the last 18 months. Part of the reason was a reduction in spare engine inventory and part of the reason is the fact that our engines estimated life is longer than what was previously estimated. Speaker 500:15:14Selling, general and administrative expenses closed the quarter at $24,300,000 compared to $15,200,000 last year, an increase of $9,000,000 Approximately $1,000,000 of this increase is due to a foreign exchange gain in the previous year. Other SG and A costs have increased by $3,000,000 mostly due to an increase in operating costs related to IT for software and for outside professional service providers. The remaining $5,000,000 increase compared to prior year relates to an increase in salaries and incentives. Salaries have increased due to the 2023 inflation. Vacant positions have been filled from this time last year. Speaker 500:15:55Given the uncertainty of the freight recession that we were managing through last year, employees did not qualify for incentive last year. We are now back to a normal run rate on salaries and incentives in 2024. As Jamie noted, it should also be taken into consideration the number of operating days in a given quarter. The Q3 in 2024 had one less operating day. The number of operating days impacts the majority of our revenue. Speaker 500:16:22With the current run rate of revenue per operating day, one less operating day compared to the prior year can impact EBITDA over $1,000,000 With the increase in revenue and with our current cost structure, Cargojet closed the 3rd quarter with $47,800,000 in free cash flow compared to $29,800,000 in the same period for prior year for an increase of approximately $20,000,000 In closing, it was 1 year ago that we announced our long term strategy as it relates to our capital allocation. Cargojet's long term capital allocation strategy continues to deliver consistent dividend growth. We're investing in growth opportunities that meet our margin requirements. We've maintained a conservative balance sheet as measured by debt to EBITDA, and we're opportunistically buying back shares. We are pleased with the progress we have made on each of these pillars. Speaker 500:17:16I will now pass it back to Jamie and Pauline and Ajay for any questions. Speaker 400:17:24Operator, would you like to? Operator00:17:26Yes. Thank you. So we will now take questions from the telephone line. The first question is from Matthew Lee from Canaccord. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:17:54Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. On the domestic side, revenue growth this quarter was maybe a bit slower than Q2. Can you just maybe talk about what trends you're seeing that give you some confidence in further acceleration for Q4 and any color you're getting from customers around the holiday season? Speaker 200:18:11Yes, good morning, Matthew. It's Jamie. Thanks for joining us this morning. Yes, it was a little it was kind of in line with what we had predicted back at the beginning of the year in terms of revenue growth. I think a couple of factors that impacted it. Speaker 200:18:231, as Scott mentioned, 1 less operating day in the quarter certainly had an impact. 2, there is some domestic revenue that includes fuel surcharge component and with lower fuel costs, we had lower fuel surcharge revenue included in that base domestic revenue. I think that was one factor. But the indications from domestic customers for peak season going into Q4 and what we've already seen in the month of October remains strong. As I noted before, we have additional charter opportunity not charter opportunities, we have additional peak scheduled charters from several customers this season that were stronger than last season. Speaker 200:19:00So we should have a good peak season in terms of domestic revenue. Speaker 600:19:07That's fair. And then maybe on fleet, 15% block hour growth this quarter on non aircraft, that's very impressive. And I think the fleet plan only has one net additional aircraft next year. But Q4 kind of shakes out the way you're expecting and it seems like signs of the demand is pretty buoyant. Should we be expecting you guys to look at adding to your fleet? Speaker 600:19:26Or is there kind Speaker 300:19:27of still more IFCs out of your current aircraft? Speaker 200:19:29No. We have some we have flexibility in the fleet and you are right, 15% is impressive and I think that coincides with what we said at the beginning of the year that we were confident that we could grow our business 15% to 20% with the existing fleet of aircraft and in the 1st 3 quarters we've demonstrated that we have that capability plus a little bit more. We do have 2 aircraft coming into the fleet in 2025, 2 767-300s. You're correct that it's net 1 if we return the leased aircraft or only leased aircraft that's term ends in the end of February. But we still have some flexibility on whether we keep that aircraft to meet our growing needs or not. Speaker 300:20:08One of the things that it's A. J, A. J, the more we fly, the less maintenance time we have on the existing fleet. And Cargojet's key success factor has been on time performance. And when you have maintenance that cannot be performed because aircraft are always flying, you will always be behind on your maintenance, which we don't like. Speaker 300:20:34And that affects our on time performance. So although it's good to get a utilization, max utilization of any aircraft, but we want to make sure that we have enough aircraft in our fleet that can go into maintenance while the other ones are flying. So it's a balancing act. And as Jamie said, we do have an option to bring on an extra aircraft in the New Year, early New Year. And anytime we have taken these aircraft for maintenance, they end up being both aircraft. Speaker 300:21:11So we're not too worried if we add an aircraft, I'm sure it will be gone. But I think our biggest concern right now is to make sure that aircraft get the required maintenance routine and heavy checks at appropriate times to ensure there's a safe working environment and also that our on time performance stays where it should Speaker 700:21:41be. Operator00:21:46Thank you. The next question is from Kamran Dorksan from NBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:21:52Yes. Thanks. Good morning. Just want to ask a question about the, I guess, the China flights, obviously, very strong growth in the all in charter line item. You mentioned that you've seen some increases in frequency, I guess, more recently. Speaker 800:22:07Can you just talk about how that contract is evolving? How you see that kind of evolving further in the next couple of quarters? Speaker 200:22:15Yes. Good morning, Cameron. As you know, when we started that program back in May, initially the revenue forecast related to that business was about $55,000,000 to $60,000,000 per year based on 3 frequencies per week. We have seen an increase in those frequencies up to 5 or 6 frequencies per week in the Q4, but that will return back. Our expectation is that's peak demand and will return back to the contractual minimum of 3 flights per week going into 2025. Speaker 800:22:46Okay. That's helpful. And then maybe my second question is just around, I guess, the optimization of some of the controllable costs, it's something you mentioned in the prepared remarks as well. Can you just maybe detail a little bit about what measures that are yet to be done here that will, I guess, optimize your cost structure in the next few quarters? Speaker 300:23:09Maybe I'll take that one, Caleb. The cost structure, it's a strange situation. While we try to manage the internal costs and get efficiencies, we're not immune to the cost settlements and the wage settlements are going on in the industry. WestJet did a maintenance contract. They did a pilot contract. Speaker 300:23:34Air Canada did a pilot contract. Across the border, there are pilot contracts. A lot of our spare parts come from the U. S. Where the lead settlements have been 30%, 40% plus. Speaker 300:23:46So all these are reflecting all going to be start reflecting in a lot of the requirements we have. So while we do certainly manage it very efficiently and we don't spend the dollar when we don't need to, but the industry, as you can see that how many strikes have happened and how many when you look at Canada Post almost ready to strike and the federal workers and everybody else, the pressures continue on positive as well. And we are also part of the whole logistics chain and supply chain and it attracts us as well. Speaker 800:24:32Okay. But are there, I guess, specific measures you can point to on the cost side that are elevated right now, but you have some ability to reduce those to offset some of the other escalating costs? Speaker 300:24:45Not very much from the industry standpoint, but gaining efficiencies through extra flying and doing consolidation of some of the routes, rerouting the aircraft. Those are the kind of things that we always look at how we get the work of 15 hours of flying at 12 hours. Those are the kind of things we internally always looking at daily basis. Speaker 200:25:13Okay. And if I could just add to A. J. Comments, Cameron, a couple of things. In terms of overtime with the pilots, that will level out as we add more crew to our line. Speaker 200:25:24But as A. J. Said, we're facing some headwinds Speaker 500:25:27in Speaker 200:25:27the future, not just with the pilot group, but with a number of different employee groups in terms of wage increases. We've had some significant and long overdue permanent headcount additions, particularly to the senior and executive management team that were lacking in certain areas. And also factor in the Canadian dollar is trading at the lowest level against the U. S. Dollar in over 4 years. Speaker 200:25:50And as you're aware, a lot of our costs are in U. S. Dollars. So all of those things sort of impact in the longer term. Speaker 800:25:56Right. Okay. That's very helpful. Thanks very much. Operator00:26:01Thank you. The next question is from Chris Murray from ACB Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:26:08Yes, thanks folks. Good morning. Maybe just turning back to the costs in the quarter. You did mention that there were sort of some one time costs around the increase in the block hours. Can you maybe try to help us quantify exactly how much that was in the quarter? Speaker 600:26:29I know there's some puts and takes and I know you called out some items, but any additional color would be helpful. Speaker 300:26:35Well, the additional costs mostly come from, as you know, we have 70 pilots. We are looking at the market condition, just take the pilots for example. We should have about 4 50 pilots, which is our ideal cost. But the market is such that there is a pilot shortage. The bottom 100 is the one that rotate. Speaker 300:27:02And every time a pilot rotates, there is a $50,000 to $70,000 in training cost because these guys take 3 to 4 months. Speaker 900:27:11By the Speaker 300:27:11time they're hired, they come online, they get trained, they get released, it's 5, 6, 7 months. And since there are backlog of training, that even adds further to the cost. So these are the kind of the one time costs where a pilot is not productive because they have the trainings to go through. And secondly, these guys are hard to find right now because there is a shortage. So we continue to work and manage because we can't turn down any business. Speaker 300:27:42So a lot of business that you see today, we carry we have to carry down over time. And that cost us a lot of money. So this is a kind of example that one time cost. We always call it one time cost, but if you every year you've got 50, 60, 70 pilots leave, they become permanent costs until the market stabilizes that there is plenty of pilots in the market place. So some of these challenges, Chris, are definitely the industry challenges, just not ours, but we try to manage it as much as we can. Speaker 600:28:20Okay. And then the other question I had is just in terms of with the existing fleet. Jamie, you made the comment about kind of 15% to 20% kind of growth on utility, on utilization, which kind of almost puts you at the far end. But we've also talked a lot in the past about being able to find different ways to optimize a fleet, whether that's daytime flying or weekend flying. As you sort of took the fleet out to, I guess, maybe what you would be thinking about would have been your MAX. Speaker 600:28:57Are there any other opportunities, either in fleet mix or the way that you operate the network to maybe find some additional capacity without having to add additional aircraft? Speaker 200:29:14Good morning, Chris. It's Jamie. No, we're pretty happy with the fleet mix that we have. I mean, with the one of the things that's very it's almost transparent to people, but it's from a cost standpoint very efficient is the fleet mix that we have with the 757, the 767, the common flight deck, pilots being able to interchange between new aircraft seamlessly both from an operational standpoint. And obviously, they were checked out on both aircraft types equally. Speaker 200:29:41So we don't have specific crews for specific aircraft that makes us or aircraft types that makes us very efficient. And we manage that on a literally on a daily basis, particularly with the domestic network. We have more control over the domestic flying and the volumes are more we control the volume not we control the volumes, but we control the capacity and can match the capacity to the volumes more closely than we would look at on the ACMI or the charter as an example. Speaker 900:30:14Okay. I'll leave it there. Thanks, folks. Operator00:30:16Thanks, Chris. Thank you. The next question is from Konark Gupta from Scotiabank. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:30:25Thanks, operator. Good morning. I just want to follow-up on the cost discussion here. In Q3, you guys had a pretty decent 33.5% margin, which is kind of very consistent with the last 2.5 years or so. I'm thinking like if you normalize for these the upfront costs, you talked about that normalizes probably in the first half of twenty twenty five. Speaker 900:30:52What's the margin on a normalized rate looking like? Like are we close to 35% or are we close to 34%? Speaker 200:31:00No. Sorry. Yes. One comment before Speaker 400:31:04I turn it Speaker 300:31:05over to Jamie. That those costs that we talked about in the 2nd are only going to stabilize if the market stabilize and there is the demand for the pilots come down or there's plenty of them. As I've said that these costs, when you have the turnover kind of we do in any sort of airline where people leave for other opportunities or they don't want to fly cargo or they don't fly at night, they go into other operations. It's very difficult that we can say, we always call it one time cost for now. But if market in 2025, the passenger, the way it has grown continues to grow, those one time costs will continue for a period of time till the market stabilizes. Speaker 300:31:58So I just wanted to make that clear that by 2025, these are not magically going to disappear. That's an industry issue that we not us, but every airline is facing. Speaker 1000:32:10So I Speaker 300:32:10just wanted to make that clear. Speaker 200:32:12And just to add to Ajay's comments, Konark, I think we would agree and I think most people on this call would the expectation would be with the level of revenue growth that we have even with some one time costs that at some point that levels out and you'll see an increase in the historical margins that we've been able to generate for this business. And I think in a normal world that would that logic would apply. And those costs will normalize over the next year, year and a half. But I think the point is that we believe that those are being more than offset by other permanent increases, whether it's facing the wage increases that we talked about with various parts of our organization, various employee groups, certainly adding headcount that were, as I mentioned before, were long overdue. Those are permanent costs, the impact of the U. Speaker 200:33:03S. Dollar. I think all of those things would lead us to an expectation that we're not those EBITDA that 33.5 EBITDA margin is not going to increase substantially in the next few years. In fact, it might actually decrease. But having said that, we're still very confident that that's going to meet our capital allocation requirements. Speaker 200:33:22We're still going to generate enough free cash flow to meet our short and long term CapEx requirements and certainly to continue our priorities of dividend payments to shareholders and share buybacks and continuing to keep our debt level at 2x to 2.2x EBITDA. Speaker 300:33:41And Konark, I must add that anything that keeps us up right now is the past pressures to not only us, but the whole industry and whole supply chain sector, whole logistics sectors face, whether it's Canada Post or whether it was UPS who had a settlement or whether it was VLADEL who recently had a settlement. So this is not an issue that is just for cargo jet. This is an industry issue and we are part of the industry. And if that that is our biggest challenge today is the creeping costs. Speaker 900:34:16Okay. No, that makes sense. Thanks guys. And in terms of capacity, I think Jamie, you pointed out earlier on that initially you guys were looking at 15%, 20% sort of increase in block hours without adding the fleet. Now Q3 you had 15% growth in block hours on the same fleet essentially. Speaker 900:34:35How much more capacity for that on the existing fleet? So the next two aircraft that you get in 2025, that will increase the capacity maybe, but on the current fleet, can you squeeze out more block outs? Speaker 200:34:48We will in the Q4 for peak season. And I think it's consistent with what we said at the beginning of the year that we felt very confident that we could grow revenues by 15% to 20% with the existing fleet that we have. And I think growing it to 15% in the last quarter is a demonstration of our capability to do that. I think as we said, it was 15% to 20%, so we're not at 20% yet. So there is a little bit of growth and that's why we're very and we're very we have the flexibility going in, as I mentioned earlier, going into 2025 with 2 additional aircraft coming sometime towards the end of the second or Q1, Q2 of the year and providing the flexibility to whether we keep the leased aircraft or not keep the leased aircraft, we still have some time. Speaker 200:35:32We'll make that decision before the end of the year, but we're very confident that that we'll have enough capacity to continue to grow at that level if demand is there. Speaker 900:35:40Okay. That's great. Thanks. And last one for me before I turn over. Maybe I don't know if AG you'd like to comment on that, but Canada Post has been going through obviously these issues, which are very public, obviously and their employees are I think, looking like they're against the weekend deliveries and all that. Speaker 900:35:59How do you see all these issues shaping up? And how does it impact your existing contractual agreements with Canada Post? So any thoughts there? Yes. So Speaker 300:36:11we do have a long term contract with Canada Post and we don't see any of this labor issues impacting Speaker 400:36:19our kind Speaker 300:36:20of business that they do with us because a lot of it's parcel, not the letter mail and all that stuff they do with us. The key thing is that if you're looking at, they don't want to do 7 days delivery and they don't want to do this. What we will find is that if Canada Post wants to be profitable or even breakeven or be competitive with the others, which they are mandated to do, by the way, they did their charter, they have to be self sufficient. And I know they're losing $700,000,000 $800,000,000 $900,000,000 a year. They will have to be competitive with UPS, DHL and FedEx for their parcel delivery or even their own subsidiary, a furolator. Speaker 300:37:10Being their customers, I can't give them advice or be I'm just giving you this as a general reader that in order for them to meet the wage demands that they're being asked of, they will have to increase productivity to become profitable. You cannot give wage increases to any group of people when productivity is being asked to be reduced. So if their mandate is truly that they have to be self sufficient and they cannot get financing from the government purses, then something has to give. The other option is that if they don't want to do that, maybe they should go to 2 days of delivering a mail or 3 days or cut back in services. So some of these things need to happen. Speaker 300:38:06Otherwise, Canada Post, it's in all of our interest to see that Canada Post makes some kind of money that it's not dependent on public persons. Speaker 900:38:17Great. That's great color. Appreciate the time as always. Thank you. Operator00:38:23Thank you. The next question is from Walter Spracklin from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:38:30Yes. Thanks very much, operator. Good morning, everyone. I want to start on the charter run rate now, and I know there's always some fluctuations in charter as sometimes domestic or ACMI borrows some capacity from your charter opportunity during your peak. And I'm just curious whether what the run rate now is on the charter, It's lifted a lot this year and is now north of $40,000,000 per quarter. Speaker 1100:38:59Do we look at that as the run rate $40,000,000 now each quarter going forward? Does it dip down in the 4th quarter? Is perhaps there's some borrowing from capacity? And maybe just the quarterly run rate on your very successful all in charter revenue piece would be appreciated here. Speaker 200:39:17Yes. Good morning, Walter. I think the expectation would be expectation would be exactly as you described that even though we have increased frequencies with our scheduled and just to clarify, we group both the scheduled, what we call scheduled charter, which is mostly the China flying that we are doing and our ad hoc charter revenue together in the same bucket. But you're correct, in the Q4, we see an increase in scheduled frequencies per week that we're doing to and from China, as I mentioned earlier. We have seen very strong ad hoc charter in the month of October, but as we get towards the end of Q4, particularly in December, the availability of aircraft and crew for continued ad hoc charter flying will probably be muted a little bit. Speaker 200:39:59So I think that the Q4 will be similar to the Q3, but going into 2025, again, we'll see a reduction. Our expectation right now is it will go back to the normal three frequencies per week on the scheduled flying, scheduled charter flying and ad hoc charter demand will be a little lower than we've seen in Q3 and Q4 going into the beginning of the year. Speaker 1100:40:23Okay. And in terms of your revenue per block hour, that was trending up and then took a dip. And I know, Scott, you mentioned there's some mix in there. I guess it comes like, first of all, is that dip, the new mix we should kind of model a decline in Raizen per Block L going forward to reflect that kind of new mix? And my second question is, and I know there's a lot of cost discussions, you're in a pretty good competitive environment. Speaker 1100:40:57To what extent can you just turn around now and say, look, cost pressure is pretty high and we're going to have to pass it on to our own customers. How do those conversations go? Speaker 300:41:08So Walter, let me take that quickly. I don't know if you just talked about cost pressures this morning. Boeing settled for 38% increases. So this is the kind of industry has been paying and it's been going on. So these pressures are definitely spread to from Boeing to Airlines to Aerospace Industries to Automobile. Speaker 300:41:34So you can keep talking about that. But just keep one thing in mind that if we were just competing for charters in Canada, I could agree with you that we would have the pricing power and we could probably get some better yields. But when the charters come in, 90% of our charters we are competing with companies in the U. S. And if we're not competitive with their pricing, they tend to how do I put it? Speaker 300:42:10Because there is so much pressure in capacity like UPS is chartering planes because they got too many. FedEx is chartering planes because they had too many. DHL is always chartering planes when they have the extra capacity. ATSD and Atlas there and Kalida, they also charter planes. So we are not just competing on the Canadian landscape when it comes to any charter, whether it's Canada, U. Speaker 300:42:34S. Or U. S. To other countries or Canada to other countries, we always have 3 or 4 or 5 competitors on each of those charters. So we do not contain the pricing power. Speaker 300:42:49We have to be competitive Speaker 500:42:50with those companies. Walter, the other thing to add revenue per block hour is there's been a steady decline in the price of fuel ever since Q3 last year. We saw that big pop a year ago and then it's been a very slow and steady decline ever since then. So a lot of our revenue does have fuel baked into that revenue as well, right? The fuel surcharge is just for domestic. Speaker 500:43:12So all that other revenue, you're going to see some noise there with the change of price of fuel. Speaker 1100:43:16Okay. That's great. I really appreciate the time. Operator00:43:26The next question is from Kevin Chiang from CIBC. Speaker 1000:43:35Maybe if I could just put a finer point on how block hours look in Q4. If I look at 2022 and 2023, I think sequentially you saw block hours up, let's say about 10 percent, I mean that was obviously in the face of a freight recession. Is that the type of sequential increase you'd expect this peak season or do we go back to something like you saw in prior years where you could see 15%, 20% plus sequential improvement in block hours? Speaker 200:44:07No, I don't think good morning, Kevin. I don't think it's of that magnitude. You're definitely going to see sequentially an increase in block hours. The big part of it will be driven by the additional frequencies that we have flying to and from China that we didn't have in those previous 2 years in 2023 2022. But we're also seeing strong demand in the Q4 with additional aircraft that we have flying primarily for DHL on an ACMI basis as well as I noted before some additional peak charters we're doing for our domestic customers. Speaker 300:44:37And Kevin, you will also see an increase in block hours because if you remember we had said that we have 4 757s parked that are being utilized. So when we can't find the 767, we fire 2,757, which increases the block hours a bit. So that number might not be fully up to speed because we when we don't turn down business and if it's profitable, we will put 2 aircraft instead of 1. So that does increase the block hours a bit. Speaker 1000:45:12That's helpful color. And maybe just my second question here on the pilot situation. It feels like it's been pretty fluid, like things were tight a while ago, and then we've had a few airlines here in Canada go under on the ultra low cost carrier side. That seemed to alleviate some of the pilot pressure, but it seems like maybe we've come full circle here where supply demand for pilots has gone tighter. 1, is that what you're seeing? Speaker 1000:45:46And then 2, just wondering if some of the more recent headwinds in hiring, are you talking that up to some of the recent, I guess, pilot contracts that have been signed effectively WestJet Air Canada total compensation has increased whatever the 30%, 40% over the term of the contract. Is that making it tougher to has that made it significantly tighter in the short period of time in getting pilots just with these new contracts being ratified? Speaker 300:46:17Yes. So a number of things there play a factor in the pilots issue. A lot of our pilots seem to be going flying for South. They're flying in U. S. Speaker 300:46:28To pay in U. S. Dollars and the single guys don't care where they fly. So there's a lot of being pilots that are moving to the South. The second part of it is, while the wage increases have gone 35%, 40% or even more in some of the airlines, the work rules and the productivity hasn't kept up. Speaker 300:46:49So they're giving more money, but they're also hiring more pilots because some of the work rules have not are not product increase in productivity. So you get two factors. One is that you got more money getting in other airlines. And the second thing is you also have less productivity. That means you need if you needed 50 pilots to do a job, you might need 60 or 70 to do the job. Speaker 300:47:21So that those are some of the things that are today's reality. And the other part of it, you should also keep in mind that when links went into CCAA or bankruptcy, they had a few 100 pilots that came on and they were absorbed within like a week. So we don't have an excess pilot, especially when you have a number of Canadian carriers that have beefed up operations, Canada has got more flights than WestJet has got a lot of flights, Sunwing, Polar Airline is a full blown airline, Flair has expanded. So if you look at all the pilots that were there like prior to COVID, we will find that the number of pilots have gone up 30%, 40%, 50% from where they used to be. The country is only producing so many pilots. Speaker 300:48:17There's no emphasis on producing had any increase in output to get the pilots trained and out of the line. And whatever we are producing, we are losing a fair bit to U. S. We are losing a fair bit to companies like Emirates overseas, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines, Cathay, Korean. So there's a lot of Canadian pilots who choose not to fly in this country. Speaker 1000:48:55That's very helpful color. Thank you very much and best of luck this peak season. Speaker 300:48:59Thank you, Kevin. Operator00:49:02Thank you. The next question is from Scott Carscallen from MacKenzie Investments. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:49:09Good morning and thanks for taking my call. In the event that we get a Trump presidency announcement tomorrow and he embarks on what he says he's going to embark on with tariffs that is 10% to 20% tariffs on everything coming into the U. S. And 60% tariffs for all goods coming in from China. Just wondering, how do you see that kind of event impacting your businesses? Speaker 600:49:33I'm thinking in particular ACMI and Charter. Thank you. Speaker 200:49:38Thanks, Scott. It's Jamie. I'll give you some comments on that. I mean, we we're well aware of that. I mean, the one thing that we're optimistic about and was very encouraging with our agreement with our Chinese customer is they're focused on the only the Canadian market and not the U. Speaker 200:49:53S. Market at all. So I think any impact of Trump presidency with increased tariffs on imports into the U. S. Will have less of an impact on our business that we're doing directly with some of the Chinese e commerce companies that are focusing more on Canada. Speaker 200:50:12Equally on the charter business, our charter our ad hoc charter business is certainly global. Most of the business is around the world. It's not specific to the U. S, it's not specific it's certainly not specific to Canada at all. We do very little domestic ad hoc charters. Speaker 200:50:25Most of them are global to Europe to other parts of Asia. Very little coming back into the U. S. It's usually between other third and fourth countries or between Canada and the third country. We're not concerned with a major impact to that. Speaker 200:50:39On an ACMI basis, certainly with the exposure that we have with DHL, at DHL, we operate 17 or 18 aircraft on an ACMI basis for them. We're not currently operating any aircraft for them out of Asia into the U. S. I don't think there'd be any impact there. Speaker 900:50:57Okay, that's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:50:59Thanks. Thank you. The next question is from Tim James from TD Speaker 700:51:10Cowen. My first question, just wondering if you saw any signs of pull forward of peak season or Q4 volumes into the Q3 from any of your customers or business lines? Speaker 200:51:25I'd say a little bit at the tail end of the Q3. In September, we had a very strong September year over year in terms of volume on all really on all three segments of the business. We saw increased activity, increased flying on an ACMI basis, particularly for DHL during September, which continues into the Q4. Equally, we started to see a little bit of the ramp up of the Chinese flying, not quite at the level that it's at today in October, November, but a little bit and certainly our ad hoc charter business in September started to pick up and was very strong in October. Speaker 700:52:01Okay. And then I guess the follow-up to that is you were providing some commentary earlier with regards to Q3 charter, Q4 charter looking sort of equally strong for a number of reasons and then the typical seasonal kind of slower revenue run rate in the 1st and second quarters. What about Q3 next year? Maybe the broader question is, is this Q3 now kind of the new baseline do you think for the Q3, Putting aside any potential natural growth or economic influences, but is this kind of the starting point as you would see it for next year in Q3 or were there some particular headwinds or tailwinds that maybe not are not necessarily normal for future years? Speaker 200:52:42Yes, I think it's maybe a little premature now at this point, Tim, to be able to accurately predict what Q3 next year is going to look like. We did have sort of significant almost record growth in ad hoc charter during the quarter. Does that continue? I mean, a lot of that is driven, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, by global sort of geopolitical impact of things in the Ukraine, things in the Middle East, different disasters around the world. It's hard to predict whether those will continue and that portion of it continue to drive ad hoc charter opportunities or growth next year. Speaker 200:53:15Equally, the growth of e commerce that we're seeing both on the domestic and on our international business, I think will continue, but I think it's a little early for us to be able to predict that accurately for next a year from now. Speaker 700:53:29Okay. Fair enough. Thanks very much. Operator00:53:33Thank you, Fin. Thank you.Read morePowered by