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Flying Agreements Revenue and Lease, Airport Services and Other Revenues
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2022
Flying Agreements Revenue and Lease, Airport Services and Other Revenues  
Flying Agreements Revenue and Lease, Airport Services and Other Revenues

(2) Flying Agreements Revenue and Lease, Airport Services and Other Revenues

The Company recognizes flying agreements revenue and lease, airport services and other revenues when the service is provided under the applicable agreement. Under the Company’s fixed-fee arrangements (referred to as “capacity purchase agreements”) with United Airlines, Inc. (“United”), Delta Air Lines, Inc. (“Delta”), American Airlines, Inc. (“American”) and Alaska Airlines, Inc. (“Alaska”) (each, a “major airline partner”), the major airline partner generally pays the Company a fixed-fee for each departure, flight hour (measured from takeoff to landing, excluding taxi time) or block hour (measured from takeoff to landing, including taxi time) incurred, and an amount per aircraft in service each month with additional incentives based on flight completion and on-time performance. The major airline partner also directly pays for or reimburses the Company for certain direct expenses incurred under the capacity purchase agreement, such as fuel, airport landing fees and airport rents. Under the capacity purchase agreements, the Company’s performance obligation is met when each flight is completed, measured in completed block hours, and is reflected in flying agreements revenue. The transaction price for the capacity purchase agreements is determined from the fixed-fee consideration, incentive consideration and directly reimbursed expenses earned as flights are completed over the agreement term. For the six months ended June 30, 2022 and 2021, capacity purchase agreements represented approximately 88.3% and 85.0% of the Company’s flying agreements revenue, respectively.

Under the Company’s prorate arrangements (also referred to as a “prorate” or “revenue-sharing” agreement), the major airline partner and the Company negotiate a passenger fare proration formula, pursuant to which the Company receives a percentage of the ticket revenues for those passengers traveling for one portion of their trip on a Company airline and the other portion of their trip on the major airline partner. Under the Company’s prorate flying agreements, the performance obligation is met, and revenue is recognized when each flight is completed based upon the portion of the prorate passenger fare the Company anticipates that it will receive for each completed flight. The transaction price for the prorate agreements is determined from the proration formula derived from each passenger ticket amount on each completed flight over the agreement term. For the six months ended June 30, 2022 and 2021, prorate flying agreements represented approximately 11.7% and 15.0% of the Company’s flying agreements revenue, respectively.

The following table represents the Company’s flying agreements revenue by type for the three and six months ended June 30, 2022 and 2021 (in thousands):

For the three months ended June 30,

For the six months ended June 30,

    

2022

    

2021

2022

    

2021

Capacity purchase agreements revenue: flight operations

$

387,456

$

273,176

$

735,930

$

484,228

Capacity purchase agreements revenue: aircraft lease and fixed revenue

 

291,585

 

256,559

 

572,004

 

488,050

Prorate agreements revenue

 

94,733

 

103,232

 

173,903

 

171,880

Flying agreements revenue

$

773,774

$

632,967

$

1,481,837

$

1,144,158

A portion of the Company’s compensation under its capacity purchase agreements is designed to reimburse the Company for certain aircraft ownership costs. The consideration for aircraft ownership costs varies by agreement but is intended to cover either the Company’s aircraft principal and interest debt service costs, its aircraft depreciation and interest expense or its aircraft lease expense costs while the aircraft is under contract. The consideration received for the use of the aircraft under the Company’s capacity purchase agreements is reflected as lease revenue, inasmuch as the agreements identify the “right of use” of a specific type and number of aircraft over a stated period of time. The lease revenue associated with the Company’s capacity purchase agreements is accounted for as an operating lease and is reflected as flying agreements revenue on the Company’s consolidated statements of comprehensive income. The Company has not separately stated aircraft rental income and aircraft rental expense in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income since the use of the aircraft is not a separate activity of the total service provided.

Under the Company’s capacity purchase agreements, the Company is paid a fixed amount per month per aircraft over the contract term. The Company recognizes revenue attributed to the fixed monthly payments proportionate to the number of block hours completed during each reporting period, relative to the estimated number of block hours the Company anticipates completing over the remaining contract term. Due to the lower number of block hours completed during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to historical levels, the amount of cash collected for the fixed amount per aircraft exceeded the revenue recognized based on block hours completed. Accordingly, the Company deferred recognizing revenue on fixed monthly cash payments the Company received under its capacity purchase agreements beginning in 2020. Based on the number of completed block hours during the six months ended June 30, 2022, the Company recognized $17.6 million of previously deferred revenue and $9.3 million of unbilled revenue, compared to deferring revenue of $26.8 million during the six months ended June 30, 2021. The Company’s deferred revenue balance was $86.3 million as of June 30, 2022, including $20.8 million in other current liabilities and $65.5 million in other long-term liabilities. The Company’s deferred revenue balance was $103.9 million as of December 31, 2021, including $24.5 million in other current liabilities and $79.4 million in other long-term liabilities. The Company’s unbilled revenue balance was $17.7 million as of June 30, 2022, and $8.4 million as of December 31, 2021, and was included in other long-term assets. The Company’s deferred revenue and unbilled revenue balance will be recognized based on the number of block hours completed during each period relative to the estimated number of block hours the Company anticipates completing over the remaining contract term.

The Company’s capacity purchase and prorate agreements include weekly provisional cash payments from the respective major airline partner based on a projected level of flying each month. The Company and each major airline partner subsequently reconcile these payments to the actual completed flight activity on a monthly or quarterly basis.

As of June 30, 2022, the Company had 521 aircraft in scheduled service or under contract under code-share agreements. The following table summarizes the significant provisions of each code-share agreement SkyWest Airlines has with each major airline partner:

United Express Agreements

Agreement

    

Aircraft type

    

Number of
Aircraft

    

Term / Termination Dates

United Express Agreements

(Capacity purchase agreement)

E175

CRJ 700

CRJ 200

90

19

70

Individual aircraft have scheduled removal dates from 2024 to 2029

United Express Prorate Agreement

(Prorate agreement)

CRJ 200

41

Terminable with 120-day notice

Total under United Express Agreements

220

Delta Connection Agreements

Agreement

    

Aircraft type

    

Number of
Aircraft

    

Term / Termination Dates

Delta Connection Agreement

(Capacity purchase agreement)

E175

CRJ 900

CRJ 700

CRJ 200

73

44

5

9

Individual aircraft have scheduled removal dates from 2022 to 2032

Delta Connection Prorate Agreement

(Prorate agreement)

CRJ 200

20

Terminable with 30-day notice

Total under Delta Connection Agreements

151

American Capacity Purchase Agreement

Agreement

    

Aircraft type

    

Number of
Aircraft

    

Term / Termination Dates

American Agreement

(Capacity purchase agreement)

E175

CRJ 700

18

90

Individual aircraft have scheduled removal dates from 2022 to 2032

Total under American Agreements

108

Alaska Capacity Purchase Agreement

Agreement

    

Aircraft type

    

Number of
Aircraft

    

Term / Termination Dates

Alaska Agreement

(Capacity purchase agreement)

E175

42

Individual aircraft have scheduled removal dates from 2030 to 2034

In addition to the contractual arrangements described above, as of June 30, 2022, SkyWest Airlines has a capacity purchase agreement with American to place two Embraer E175 dual-class regional jet aircraft (“E175”) into service. The delivery dates for the two new E175 aircraft are currently scheduled for the third quarter of 2022. SkyWest Airlines also has an agreement with American to place 11 used Canadair CRJ700 regional jet aircraft (“CRJ700”) under a multi-year capacity purchase agreement in 2023.

SkyWest Airlines has a capacity purchase agreement with Alaska to place an additional E175 aircraft into service. The delivery date for the new E175 aircraft is currently scheduled for the first half of 2023.

SkyWest Airlines has a capacity purchase agreement with Delta to place 14 E175 aircraft into service. The delivery dates for the 14 new E175 aircraft are currently scheduled for the second half of 2022.

Final delivery and in-service dates for aircraft to be placed under contract may be adjusted based on various factors.

When an aircraft is scheduled to be removed from a capacity purchase arrangement, the Company may, as practical under the circumstances, negotiate an extension with the respective major airline partner, negotiate the placement of the aircraft with another major airline partner, return the aircraft to the lessor if the aircraft is leased and the lease is expiring, place owned aircraft for sale, or pursue other uses for the aircraft. Other uses for the aircraft may include placing the aircraft in a prorate agreement, leasing the aircraft to a third party or parting out the aircraft to use the engines and parts as spare inventory or to lease the engines to a third party.

Lease, airport services and other revenues primarily consists of revenue generated from aircraft and spare engines leased to third parties and airport customer services, such as gate and ramp agent services at applicable airports where the Company has agreements with third parties. The following table represents the Company’s lease, airport services and other revenues for the three and six months ended June 30, 2022 and 2021 (in thousands):

For the three months ended June 30,

For the six months ended June 30,

    

2022

    

2021

2022

    

2021

Operating lease revenue

$

16,450

$

16,458

$

33,005

$

31,408

Airport customer service and other revenue

8,861

7,565

19,395

15,979

Lease, airport services and other

$

25,311

$

24,023

$

52,400

$

47,387

The following table summarizes future minimum rental income under operating leases primarily related to leased aircraft and engines that had remaining non-cancelable lease terms as of June 30, 2022 (in thousands):

July 2022 through December 2022

    

$

23,754

2023

 

47,084

2024

 

45,053

2025

 

40,083

2026

 

34,516

Thereafter

 

120,636

$

311,126

Of the Company’s $5.6 billion of property and equipment, net as of June 30, 2022, $240.1 million of regional jet aircraft and spare engines was leased to third parties under operating leases. The Company’s mitigation strategy for the residual asset risks of these assets includes leasing aircraft and engine types that can be operated by the Company in the event of a default. Additionally, the operating leases typically have specified lease return condition requirements paid by the lessee to the Company and the Company typically maintains inspection rights under the leases.

The transaction price for airport customer service agreements is determined from an agreed-upon rate by location applied to the applicable number of flights handled by the Company over the agreement term.

The Company’s operating revenues could be impacted by several factors, including changes to the Company’s code-share agreements with its major airline partners, changes in flight schedules, contract modifications resulting from contract renegotiations, the Company’s ability to earn incentive payments contemplated under the Company’s code-share agreements and settlement of reimbursement disputes with the Company’s major airline partners.

Other ancillary revenues commonly associated with airlines, such as baggage fee revenue, ticket change fee revenue and the marketing component of the sale of mileage credits, are retained by the Company’s major airline partners on flights that the Company operates under its code-share agreements.

Allowance for credit losses

The Company monitors publicly available credit ratings for entities for which the Company has a significant receivable balance. As of June 30, 2022, the Company had gross receivables of $97.0 million in current assets and gross receivables of $234.4 million in other long-term assets. The Company has established credit loss reserves based on publicly available historic default rates issued by a third party for companies with similar credit ratings, factoring in the term of the respective accounts receivable or notes receivable. During the six months ended June 30, 2022, there were no significant changes in the outstanding accounts receivable or notes receivable or the credit ratings of the entities. The Company’s credit loss reserve was $40.4 million at June 30, 2022, compared to $42.0 million at December 31, 2021. The $1.6 million decrease in the credit loss reserve for the six months ended June 30, 2022, was reflected as a decrease to the credit loss expense.