Good afternoon, everybody. Thanks for joining. For those that do not know me, my name is Guilherme Mendes. I'm the JP Morgan analyst covering airlines for Latin America, including LATAM Airlines. We're glad to welcome Roberto Alvo here today. I guess before we start it, Tori will make some quick comments, and then we can get it started.
Thank you very much, and thank you, everyone, for being here. It's a pleasure to be here with you all today. Before I turn the call over to Roberto and Guilherme for some brief remarks and then kicking off our fireside chat, I'd just like to remind you all that certain statements in this session may be forward-looking statements relating to the company's future plans, objectives, and expectations. These statements are based on a range of assumptions that LATAM believes are reasonable, but are subject to certain uncertainties that are outlined and discussed in detail in our 20-F, our CMF, and SEC filings. The company's actual results may differ significantly from those that are projected or suggested by any forward-looking statements due to the variety of those factors. With that, I will turn it over to Roberto for a few introductory remarks.
Thank you very much. Thanks, Guilherme, for hosting me here. I think it's an interesting time to be in this industry at this moment. We're coming off the back of the best year ever of LATAM with very solid margins, cash flow, a great position in the market. I look forward to our operation, what we're doing with a lot of optimism. I think that LATAM stands to continue standing out in the region going forward with a very good execution, with very good drive for premium passenger and premium revenue coming forward. Despite the crisis that we're seeing at this point in time with the war in Iraq, I think that this happens in the best moment that LATAM has ever been, and it's a good place to be given the fact that we have this crisis.
Thanks again for having me.
Yeah. Thank you. Let me start. We exit 2025, as you mentioned, as a stellar year. The company revised its guidance three times, if I'm mistaken. Then we started 2026, as you mentioned, in a very good position, and then the war hit. I mean, how you're seeing 2026 in terms of demand environment and LATAM's ability to potentially compensate in this spike in oil prices going forward.
The year started with very strong demand figures. We have released our January and February traffic report, as you've seen it, very strong. We see in every segment, whether it's passenger, whether it's cargo, in general, a very good demand trend. LATAM is more exposed to premium travel, to corporate market share, to premium leisure than most of the airlines in the region. That, I think, puts us in a very good situation vis-a-vis the current position. Let me just give you one figure. LATAM has 40% of domestic market share capacity in Brazil, but we're closer to 50% in corporate market share for domestic Brazil. In that sense, this is happening on the back of a very strong environment.
Our revenues are growing much faster than our capacity is, and in the last two or three weeks, we have seen, despite the news geopolitically, no impact on any of the segments we're operating. Much to the contrary, I think we've seen an acceleration of revenues in the last two or three weeks. We've seen the industry being very active in passing the cost of higher fuel into prices. In our case, we have seen a good response in the most important markets where we operate.
Great. Putting into perspective what we saw in 2022, kind of a similar situation with the Russia-Ukraine and the spike in oil. If I recall it correctly, the industry were able to pass it through, if not 100% of it, a big chunk of it. Do you think that we might be in the same situation, meaning demand is strong enough for the current oil curve to be compensated?
I think the dynamics are actually a little bit better. In 2022, if you remember, still the industry was coming out of the effects of the pandemic. I don't think the demand was in such a strong position. We still had a few waves of COVID hitting us from time to time. Today, the demand environment, I think, is much healthier than the one we saw at that time. We had a bigger capacity reduction in 2022 in some of the markets just because demand wasn't as strong. At this point in time, what we're seeing is some reduction in marginal flying of some of our competitors. I think that this is fair that will continue happening. There's probably a number of no regret decisions in terms of capacity to be taken.
With this high fuel price. I think that the fact of the matter is that the situation on the revenue perspective is very solid today.
Perfect. LATAM is the only airline in the region that actually hedges for fuel, right? Can you remind us, your current policy? I mean, how protected you are, at least in the short term?
Yeah. Our hedging policy is relatively simple. We are protected with options and collars, and they protect us within a range. This is not designed for these price spikes, because we believe that the industry at the end of the day will adapt itself and higher costs will be passed onto prices or lower fuel on the other side, more than the hedging itself. We have a policy where we'll cover around 40% of our volume, but that coverage happens only within a range of pricings with options. It's asymmetrical options, so that means we benefit more relatively on the higher prices than on the lower prices, but still, as we have disclosed, our policy covers us only within a range of prices.
Perfect. Think about your guidance for the year and think about maybe in the short term, besides the potential ability to increase yields on the cost front, we saw a major adjustment since the Chapter 11 process, CASK ex-fuel materially coming down. Do you see any room or maybe before that, what has changed since then, since COVID, since Chapter 11, and what levers do you still think you can pull? And o ptimize that?
Non-fuel cost, of course, no? Yeah, we have pretty much kept our cost per ASK constant since 2019. If you adjust for exchange rate and i nflation, actually we are probably 16 or 17 percentage points of lower cost per ASKs compared to 2019. The company doesn't think about cost reduction programs done from time to time. This is a permanent action we do on a day-to-day basis. We run 500-700 different initiatives to keep our costs down. We have been able to basically offset all of the macro impacts over the last five years with that. Going forward, the focus is the same. I think that technology actually now brings a very interesting opportunity to continue keeping our operations better.
If you believe that we run an airline that transport 250,000 passengers today, it's a big operation, and I think we do it pretty well. If you believe that we cannot improve, that is a wrong assumption. I think that there's significant room for improvement, but I think that room for improvements can come on the side of how we treat, manage, and use information data. I'm not talking about AI, I'm talking about technology in general. That requires, I think, to relearn how do we do many things. I think about technology not as something that you just showcase and say, you know, we're doing it. It's how we change the way we work. How do we embed the use of information and data into our teams?
I think that the potential that the industry has as a whole to streamline, improve their operations with technology is huge. The focus is there, regardless of the very good results we've had in the last two or three years. We will continue keeping this as one of the most significant advantages we have created in the last few years. The restructuring helped, but this is way behind us already. Now we're focusing on how we continue to have a leading cost position in the industry, despite of the macro environment.
At that point, you said it's not all by AI, but AI seems to be a big thing for now. How the company is adjusting to this new reality, can you comment some of those technology investments that you have been making?
Yeah, more than investments, this is just rethinking the way we work, so we embedded technology into the areas. Today, there is no IT structure. The IT structure is very small. The central IT structure is basically hardware only. The IT teams are within the area, so the VP of maintenance runs maintenance together with all the IT work that they need to do to optimize their operations. This is more than a technological change. For me, it's a cultural and an organizational change. What we're doing is basically piece by piece in the company, we're transforming the way we have operated normally, and we're doing the same things that technology companies are doing. Simply, you know, having technology being another tool of the craftsmanship that the people that know how to run the business do on a day-to-day basis.
We started with maintenance three years ago. It's amazing what we have achieved. I gave on Investor Day a very good example, I'll just repeat it. With a team of eight people, four from the business, four from technology, we were able to redo our long-term planning for maintenance. We found 1.4% of the assets be given back to the business, basically by improving the long-term maintenance planning of the company. The opportunity cost of the fleet of LATAM is probably $50 billion. 1.4% is $200 million of incremental assets that I created with a $4 million investment. Return is 50 times. That's the potential that technology has to bring into streamlining operations. In an industrial company, whether it's an airline or any industrial company, I think that's a big portion of the future.
Amazing. I remind everyone, if you want to ask questions, please feel free to raise your hand and we can bring you the mic. Roberto, back to what you said strong demand despite all the, let's say, uncertainties regarding fuel. Can you comment about competition? I guess the overall impression is that the competitive environment in the region, in Latin America in general, has been pretty good post-pandemic. Everybody kind of going in the same direction, thinking about profitability. I mean, just correct me if I'm wrong, but I mean, how is that the case? Is competition really that healthy? If anything has changed in recent weeks, once those conflicts started.
Yeah. I would say that we see a very rational market today. I think it's very clear everyone wants to make money. We have seen higher fuel prices being passed. The industry is very dynamic. In domestic Brazil, for example, there's been already four price increases.
Since the conflict started.
Since the conflict started, I see capacity being relatively ordered in terms of the number of planes that are coming to the industry. You see reports from our competition. Azul just exited Chapter 11 with a very c lear plan of very little growth. I see on the Pacific side, actually, we are the only non-ULCC operating on the Pacific side, which is good because it allows us to craft our product to what is really needed for the market who is not an ULCC customer.
We have much lower exposure than most of the companies in the Pacific. In this current environment, that is going to be a key distinguishing factor. I don't know what's going to happen with the crisis. Who knows? I think that LATAM has positioned itself in a place where at the end of the day, there's an opportunity on the back of this, and I think that we will be on the outset of this better place on a relative basis vis-a-vis the rest of the industry.
LATAM has an absolute advantage, which is its numbers, its balance sheet, very solid across the line. It has a relative advantage, which is that we're better positioned, whether it's on the revenue side, whether it's on the financial side, to overcome big swings in the markets as the one we're seeing today. All in all, today we see, in general a market that has been very stable in terms of capacity. Actually, LATAM is probably growing a little bit more than the average in the industry this year as well.
Let me break down thinking about the two main region, at least in South America. One is Brazil and then one is Colombia. Let's start with Colombia maybe. Historically is the region where we saw the, let's say, the most aggressive competition in relative terms for the industry. It looks like the situation it's kind of changing. I guess the rationality argument probably also applies to Colombia. Specifically about the market domestically, how it has been trending?
We had 2024 that had overcapacity in domestic Colombia. 2025 was more stable. We see a level of stability today. I think that capacity and demand are in a good place. I think that the most important thing here is, at the end of the day, you know, carriers are more exposed to a more leisure travel segment. The problem today is either they try to pass on higher fuel prices at the expense of probably losing passengers because of them operating on more elastic segments of the market, or they try to keep their prices not higher, but then absorbing the whole of the fuel price increases.
That's a complicated place to be, and we see that in general in the Pacific, not only in Colombia but also in Peru and Chile, where the ULCCs, the operators are targeting a more elastic market segment, are going to be faced with complicated decisions in the next few weeks, I think.
Yeah. Then think about Brazil now. Brazil is the largest domestic market that you operate. The past few years has been pretty good in terms of competition because GOL and Azul was dealing with their own restructuring process. We now see GOL came out of Chapter 11 last year. Azul is now coming out of their own restructuring. Does anything change in Brazil for 2026?
I think that before talking about them, I think it's important to talk about LATAM. You know, what we're doing, what we're set up to do. We have become, I believe, the leader by far, clearly in Brazil, whether it's in the domestic industry, whether as the Brazilian operator that connects Brazil to the world. Today, we have 40% capacity share in domestic Brazil. As I said, close to 50% of corporate market share. We have almost 25% of international capacity share from Brazil to the world. We have the largest, most complete frequent flyer program in South America and particularly in Brazil. The delivery that we have, the service, the product today stands out completely vis-a-vis the rest of the industry. Our people are the best by far, and I think that I can voice what he said, what Ed said in the morning.
I heard him, and this is the only thing that you cannot copy, and I think that LATAM has the best people in South America by far. LATAM has put itself, I think, in a leading position in its most important market. Brazil is 45% of what represents to LATAM, and it's 50% of the industry in South America. With a footprint today that is very hard to equate. We have more than 55% of capacity share in the most important market in South America, which is Guarulhos.
60% of the premium slots at Guarulhos are operated by LATAM. Regardless of what GOL and Azul do today, I think that we do put ourselves in a position to lead the industry going forward with confidence, and I think that the consumers are seeing that. Having said that, those two airlines exited their restructurings much later than what we did. I think that we took good advantage of the timing, and what I think about or I see going forward in Brazil is the same with the same level of confidence, is just making sure that this is the preferred airline for everybody that wants to fly within Brazil or to the world.
Great. Then thinking still about Brazil and trying to connect with your fleet plan. You're bringing in a couple of Embraers, which is something new for LATAM. Can you comment about the decision to start operating the E2s and your expectations in terms of deployment, timing, which routes you'll be focusing first?
We're very pleasantly surprised with the E2, what we have seen. I think it's a great airplane. I think it's going to be a great success in Brazil. South America in general still do remember that it's a relatively immature market. I mean, it's one-fourth of the passengers per capita you see in the U.S. or in Europe. Many of the cities, the smaller cities, are very poorly connected. This is a great tool to provide LATAM with capillarity into their network on an aircraft that I think is going to be extremely successful and extremely efficient. It can serve, in time, three purposes. One is opening new routes where we currently don't operate because the airport infrastructure doesn't allow it to operate or because simply the economics don't make it work with 319 or 320 .
We'll see increased frequencies in certain routes where actually on certain times of day this is better to run a smaller airplane. I think in time, this will be a good replacement of the 319 as well.
We have 24 firm, we have 50 options, and we're extremely pleased with this. We're working very hard to make an entry into service 14 months after buying aircraft. That probably will be a world record.
Yeah.
Both Embraer and LATAM are very focused, and we're expecting delivery of our first E2 in October. We'll receive a dozen by the end of the year. It will not alter the capacity of the year significantly because they come at the end of it, but it will have full effect in 2027. The organization is ecstatic about it. I mean, imagine the Brazilian will have 22,000 people in Brazil. This is going to be a great end of the year for us and for the organization.
Yeah.
When they enter service.
Yeah. The rest of your fleet plan. Think about the narrow bodies and the wide bodies. I mean, how has this been evolving? Airlines' aircraft coming online and is still in delays?
It's better. We're seeing better performance from both Airbus and Boeing. Still not there yet, if you ask me, in terms of deliveries. You can see still some struggle, supply chain issues, eventually engines still an issue. We have a number of AOGs because of engines on the Pratt side, but relatively small to the size of our fleet. We have 41 aircraft arriving this year, so 12, the 12 E2s that we talked about, plus 26 320s and three 787s. I think that that will be met. I think that we will get deliveries of those airplanes relatively in time. The situation clearly much better than in the past years.
Yeah. On the Embraers still, I know it's relatively small when you think about your unit cost. Does it change much having the tools on your fleet together with the narrow-bodies?
Of course it's a smaller airplane, and it has a higher unit cost than an 320neo.
Yeah.
The difference is not as significant as people think, and it has a much better unit cost than the 319 . In time, as probably that fleet will start replacing some of the old 319 s, I think that at the end of the day, we'll see some efficiency. For the gauge and for the range, I really think that the E2 is very well fine-tuned. It's gonna be a very efficient machine.
When you think of LATAM maybe five years from now, do you think that the number of Embraers you'll be operating will be increasing over time? It's more like let's try to be more regional, or it might just replace the 319s and that's it?
We'll see. I mean, we have 50 options. That's why we created that scenario, so that we can increase the size of the fleet. I think that for the time being, we're focused on the first deliveries. 2027, we'll think about that growth when time comes.
Any questions from the audience? Roberto, let's talk about the product. In recent years, I guess the discussions about the premium services, the loyalty program, and how LATAM has been able to achieve, let's say, higher profitability relative to peers by offering this more premium product in the end. I mean, how has it been changing in recent years, especially post Chapter 11? And if you could comment about the profitability levels of the premium passenger and the average passenger.
Okay. First, most important thing in LATAM, let me explain our priorities. It's very simple, but very compelling because you talk about product. What matters in product, in our opinion, is of course the delivery of the hard product if you want, the seats, the plane, the IFE, all of that is important. I think much more about the software part, the people.
Now, priorities in LATAM are very simple: first our people, second our customers, third our environment, fourth our numbers, in that order. What I try to do is I try to solve the root cause. The root cause is if I want to have customers happy, first of all, I need to have people happy, because those are the guys who actually face my customers. My most important job is to make sure that the people, that 41,000 souls that work in LATAM wake up every morning, and they say, "I want to work for this company because what this company is doing is the right thing professionally and personally for me." If you get that engagement, then the delivery of the product and the experience vis-a-vis the customer is much easier. You can't have.
You cannot have a successful airline, I believe, if you don't treat your customers well with a good delivery. To do that, you need to have the right organization and the right mindset. In LATAM, we're very committed to what we do in South America. We are basically 30% of anything that moves within South America is flown by LATAM Domestic International. We owe ourselves to the communities and the places where we operate, the societies where we are, and that's why we care about our environment much more than simply CO2 emissions. It's just the purpose of the company, the group being there. If we do these three things right, people, customers, environment, the numbers will follow. We see the results as a consequence of doing these three things right. You see, that's the strategy of LATAM.
It's very simple. I think that you have seen this machine working in the last few years, and this is why our results have come. At the end of the day, we have created an ecosystem, if you want, where the people make the operation be better, very reliable. We're dependent, dependable the way we operate. The customers want to fly us, not only because we have the best network, it's because on how we treat them. That drives premium revenue, which allows us to grow faster and grow more. It all starts with people, as simple as that. I think that the flywheel is turning in the right direction and it's hard to catch up to that, I think.
Let me just follow up on the profitability levels, because something that we hear about the industry in Latin America is that obviously the premium cabins they tend to be more profitable than the average coach seat. In average terms, every seat tends to be profitable, which is not something that we usually see across other regions. Is that the case? Can you comment on the overall profitability between cabins?
Well, in general, I would say first, when you run a 16% operating margin, which is what we had last year, it's hard to be at that level if one thing wasn't profitable. I think that across the board, whether it's one business or another, whether it's one class or one segment, whether it's cargo or passengers, we haven't talked about cargo. I think it's a n interesting moment to talk about cargo and given the circumstances, everything works well. One of the good things that we have in LATAM is that we have provided ourselves with flexibility in terms of the size of our cabins.
Not in the wide bodies, but in the narrow bodies we do like the European business model with a movable curtain, you see. Why is premium revenue growing faster in the case of LATAM? Is because our service is better, because our preference is better, but also because my capacity in the premium cabins is growing.
Yeah.
It's growing much faster than my capacities, you see. You asked me about profitability on the cabins. I would answer a little bit different. It's because we have a flexible size on our premium cabins. At the end of the day, we can model better the split of our profits between different cabins. It's not static as probably you would sometimes think about in the U.S. The margins are probably less variable because we can size the premium cabin to what we believe is optimal for the business. The beautiful thing about it is that if you increase the size of your premium cabin, you decrease the size of your coach, of your main cabin. By decreasing the size of the main cabin, you increase the RASM of the main cabin as well.
You see? Of course, your CASK increases because you have fewer seats, but if your revenue increases faster than your CASK increases, then the equation works really well.
Makes sense. You mentioned about cargo. I mean, how is the cargo business doing in trying to connect with the fleet plan? Are we getting new freighters as well? Using the belly of the aircraft. How should we think about the cargo business going forward?
Cargo is around 13% of revenues today. This is again another level of diversification that I think is important for us, not only the countries where we are. Cargo has, in this current environment, first the ability to pass on fuel prices faster and easier than the passenger side. I think that what we have seen in the Middle East as well, which creates a decrease of cargo capacity because two of the largest c argo airlines in the world today have significant constraints in terms of how to operate. Also sea freight, even though there's little model change, it happens from time to time, and the current situation in the Middle East is also creating big strains in sea.
That means that some of these flows will probably divert into air as well. In particular, this moment, I think is going to be on a relative basis, more beneficial for the cargo segment just because of the dynamics. We have a fleet of, as you know, 20 freighters. Our model is more freighter supporting belly.
Yeah.
60% of our revenue is on the belly. We don't use the freighter necessarily as a standalone freighter operation. It's more to support our passenger network. For the time being, we like the size we have, so we don't intend to add more freighters for the time being.
Makes sense. Shifting gears to capital allocation. Well, strong free cash flow generation, 2024, 2025, likely 2026. We saw the dividend buybacks last year. When you think about capital allocations first in reinvest on the business, then paying dividends, then doing buybacks, how should investors think about your pecking order?
First is keeping our within the financial policy we have, no? We're trying to target BB+. We're almost there, which is where positive outlook by Moody's a couple weeks ago to getting there. Leverage and liquidity are the other two important metrics.
That's the first thing. We will stick with our financially prudent policy, which we believe is prudent, which actually I think today shows how important it's to have a strong balance sheet as a competitive advantage. These are the moments when you really remember how important for our industry is to have a strong balance sheet. We'll invest in the business and anything on excess of that, the idea is to do capital allocation. I don't think today we're looking at delevering further. Our non-fleet debt has remained stable, but the company has grown around 20%-25% in the last two or three years. That means that actually the non-fleet debt as a percentage of total debt has been decreasing.
Yeah.
The rest that goes beyond the investment in the business, the idea is to look at ways of allocating it back to shareholders. There's you have different mechanisms. In Chile, normally dividends are the most normal one, but you can do other things. You can do capital reductions.
Sure.
We'll see. For the time being, last year, one way or another, we distributed back $1.2 billion. If things remain in a good place going forward this year, despite of the challenges we're seeing today, I think that you have already an interesting footprint of what happened 2025 or 2026.
That's great to hear. Remind me, I recorded this 5% limit on buybacks in Chile, right?
Yes.
You did that, you canceled the shares. Can you do it again this year, or do you have some limitations of it? I guess it's a five-year agreement.
We will see. It's one of the things we're looking at. At this time, I think, we're focused on making sure that we have shareholders meeting next year. Remember, in Chile, dividends are not defined by the board.
Yeah.
They're defined by the shareholders. That's step one. It's what do the shareholders want to do with the dividend policy, and we'll take it from there.
Amazing. Talking about Delta. We saw Delta earlier today presenting here. This probably is one of the strongest partnerships that Delta has in the region. Can you comment about how the JV has been working?
It's been great. It's a little bit over three years since we started in October 2022. We actually, the combined capacity grew from 30% to almost 33%. Today, one out of three ASKs or ASMs between South America, the countries that are under the JV and North America are in the partnership with LATAM, with Delta. They're a great partner, you know what I mean? It's not always the day you find the largest company in the world coming and sitting down with you and say, "How do we make things better for both of us? How do we improve what we do?
Yeah.
on a day-to-day basis? I think the teams work amazingly well. It's been beneficial for both of us. I think a testament of it is how we have improved our position in the market. You know, people don't talk about that so much, but if you look at the U.S., two-thirds of the demand from South America to the U.S. go east of the Mississippi. Atlanta is by far the best hub to manage traffic from South America into the U.S., just because of the location. The complementarity of the network has been extremely good. It has actually been very successful in the sense that there's more than 350 cities today that are connected between both networks that serve our customers in South America and Delta's customers in the U.S.
Great. Now let's talk, think about maybe five years down the road. I know it's a cyclical industry. I know there's a war going on. Think about the supply and demand balance in the region. How sustainable do you think the current capacity growth in the region is going forward? Let's say in the next five years, can the industry continue to grow at mid to high single digits, or not?
I mean, South America is, as we said in maturity, if you look at Airbus, Boeing, any of these publications, they still point out at South America as being, or Latin America in general, the highest traffic market in the world. I think that's sustainable for a while because we're still very poorly connected as a region. I think that LATAM is very well placed to be a part of that, and continuing improving the footprint we have and the service we will do for our customers and the people that live in the region. This year, as you know, we've guided 8% capacity increase.
Under normal circumstances, I think that's easy to think about continuing doing that. I think that LATAM still has a couple of years where it can grow faster than the industry. 5%-6% probably leading to long-term growth for Latin America, for South America, which is what you see these firms forecasting, I think is perfectly feasible.
Makes sense. We are approaching the hour. Last one from my end is you as the CEO of the company, I mean, what is your biggest concern other than the Iran situation?
I guess in the short term it's that. Now we will see how this evolves. Still very early to say how this will end. We'll see. In the medium term, I think about transforming LATAM. I think that LATAM will have to be a very different company in five years than what it is today, and not because we're going to do something very different from a business perspective. We just simply think that technology will create a huge amount of opportunities for improving our operations, for monetizing our size. You know, we have 53 million frequent flyer members in South America. It's the seventh-largest program in the world out of a region that is 6% of the world capacity. It's huge. The information we have with respect to the environment, our customers is huge.
We're the only entity in South America that has that real estate as well. I think that we have a very interesting path forward of trying to use the billions of dollars of investment we've made in creating the infrastructure we have into doing something beyond simply aviation by harnessing the information that we have today, whether it's how we fly, you know, the markets where we operate and so on. We have the largest database in all of Latin America of information. All of the flights over the last years is there. I mean, imagine the potential you have to improve the things that you do today when information is there. Very excited about that.
Perfect. Right on time. Thank you so much, Roberto. Thank you all for joining.
Thank you very much.