Donald Trump Just Did Delta Air Lines a Big Favor
Donald Trump is still two months away from assuming the presidency, but his victory earlier this month has already had a massive impact on the financial markets.
One major development is that interest rates have risen sharply. Many investors expect that Trump's plans to increase spending on infrastructure and the military while cutting taxes will drive faster GDP growth. That could stoke inflation, forcing the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates faster than previously expected. In the week after the election, U.S. 30-year mortgage rates and the 10-year Treasury rate both rose by about 0.4 percentage points.
That could be great news for Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL). Right now, the company's pension plan is dramatically underfunded. Higher interest rates will reduce its pension liability -- and ultimately free up more money for Delta to return to its shareholders.
Delta's pensions are underfunded by more than $10 billion. Image source: The Motley Fool.
Delta's big pension liability
Since the Great Recession, Delta Air Lines has put a great deal of effort into improving its balance sheet. Indeed, it has reduced its debt load by more than $10 billion over that period. This helped Delta win its first investment-grade credit rating earlier this year.
However, Delta's pension liability has actually increased over the past eight years, and is now significantly larger than its debt burden. As of the end of September, Delta's unfunded pension and other post-employment benefit liabilities totaled $12.6 billion. That's a massive amount of money relative to the company's market cap of about $35 billion.
Delta Air Lines Total Long Term Debt (Quarterly), data by YCharts.
Higher contributions to its pension plan haven't helped Delta reduce its pension liability yet. Over the past several years, those contributions have been offset by a variety of other factors, leaving the total pension liability roughly constant.
Interest rates matter (a lot)
Pension benefits are paid out over decades. Companies calculate their pension liabilities by determining what amount of high-quality corporate bonds they would need to cover that stream of pension payments over time. As interest rates rise, pension liabilities shrink, because it's possible to generate more income from each dollar invested in a corporate bond.
In Delta's 2015 annual report, the company estimated that a 0.5-percentage-point increase in its discount rate (the assumed interest rate for high-quality corporate bonds) would reduce its pension liability by about $1.2 billion. By contrast, a 0.5-percentage-pointdecrease in the discount rate would increase the pension liability by $1.3 billion.
During the first half of the year, the 10-year Treasury rate plunged from nearly 2.3% to a low of about 1.4%, before recovering to around 1.8% by early November. The rise in interest rates since the election has almost fully erased the decline from earlier this year. That's equivalent to reducing Delta's pension liability by about $1 billion.
10 Year Treasury Rate, data by YCharts.
Only the beginning?
If Donald Trump's administration pursues deficit spending policies to drive faster economic growth, interest rates and inflation could continue to rise. This will further reduce Delta's pension liabilities.
A year ago, Delta estimated that if it contributes $1 billion a year to its pension plan, its pension liability would be 80% funded by 2020, assuming no change in interest rates. But if the discount rate rises by 2 percentage points, Delta's pensions would be almost fully funded by 2020 (again, assuming $1 billion in annual contributions).
In other words, the more interest rates rise, the sooner Delta Air Lines will be able to stop devoting $1 billion annually to pension funding. That will free up more cash for shareholder-friendly dividends and buybacks in the years to come.
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