3/10/2026

speaker
Unknown Participant

Thank you. Thank you. Bye. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

good afternoon ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the transit at inc first quarter 2026 results conference call at this time online to listen only mode following the presentation we will conduct a question and answer session if at any time during this call you require immediate assistance please press star 0 for the operator this call is being recorded on tuesday march 10th 2026. i would now like to turn the conference over to andreanne gagne Senior Director, Communications. Please go ahead.

speaker
Andreanne Gagné
Senior Director, Communications

Bonjour et bienvenue à cet appel trimestriel de Transat. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter earning call ended January 31, 2026. Annie Guérard, President and CEO, and Jean-François Pruneau, our Chief Financial Officer, will provide an overview of the quarter and comment on the current operational situation and commercial plans. Jean-François will also discuss our financial results in detail. We will then take questions from financial analysts. Questions from journalists will be taken offline after the call. The conference call will be conducted in English, but questions may be asked in French or English. As usual, our supplementary disclosure has been updated and is available on our website in the Investors section. Jean-François may refer to it when he presents the results. Our comments and discussion today may include forward-looking information regarding Transat's outlook, objectives, and strategies that are based on assumptions and are subject to risk and uncertainty. Forward-looking statements represent Transat's expectations as at March 10, 2026, and are therefore subject to change after that date. Our actual results may differ materially from any stated expectation. please refer to a forward-looking statement in TRNSA's second quarter news release available on TRNSA.com and on CEDAR+. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Annie for opening remarks.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining our fiscal 2026 first quarter conference call. Before talking about Q1 results, I would like to comment on Transat's annual and special meeting of shareholders held earlier today. Today's vote delivered a clear mandate to continue executing on our turnaround plan and confirm that this board is the right team to guide Transat through the next phase of its strategy. The board elected this morning will bring deep and multidisciplinary expertise with a mix of new and returning directors. Transat is well positioned to reach new heights. Our focus is on the wavering, discipline execution, strengthen profitability, and sustain long-term value for all shareholders. The mandate obtained today by shareholders provides clarity for employees, customers, plant partners, lenders, and regulators so we can keep executing. Propelled by the strong signal of support, we will continue to build on our momentum created by the solid foundation of the Elevation Program. Before moving on, I would like to take a moment to acknowledge a key contributor to TransEd's journey. I would like to personally thank Susan Krisman who served on Transat's board of directors since 2014, including the last three years as chair. Susan, let me express sincere thanks for your unwavering support and wise counsel for all these years. I want to thank all other directors who served in the recent years while Transat was facing unprecedented challenges. Thank you all for your important contribution. I also welcome all new board members with whom I'll be as educated and engaged to work with. Turning to Q1 results, Transat delivered a solid financial performance reflecting sustained momentum from the diligent execution of our profitable growth strategy. Key initiatives implemented during the last several quarters including advanced revenue management practices, network diversification strategy, and increased connectivity produced a 5% revenue increase to $871 million in the quarter, despite some disruption from Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica. Adjusted EBITDA grew 68% to $34 million driven by higher revenues and ongoing discipline cost management, reflecting the benefits of our elevation program initiative. During the quarter, we also reached an important milestone for the ratification of a new five-year collective agreement with our pilots. This agreement recognized their contribution, brings us closer to industry standards, and introduces meaningful efficiency and productivity improvement. We are pleased with our operating performance in the first quarter of 2026, highlighted by sustained year-over-year traffic growth and a fifth consecutive quarter of yield improvement. This momentum is reflected across our key operating matrix. Capacity expressed as available seat miles increased by 1%, while capacity for sun routes, our main program during this season, improved by 4.4%. Our load factor reached 81.5%, up from 80.6% in the same period last year. Finally, traffic expressed in revenue passenger miles rose 2.2% while yields were 1.4% higher than for the same period last year. Turning to our operations, we have a fleet of 43 aircraft of which four were grounded in the first quarter and will remain grounded in Q2 due to ongoing GTF engine issues. As indicated last quarter, we expect the situation to gradually improve with the number of grounded aircraft projected to decline to three by summer and full resolution anticipated by the end of 2027 or early 2028. As outlined last quarter, we have launched and announced multiple new destinations and extended service across several regions. Recent additions include new destinations such as Turana, Albania, as well as Agadir, Morocco, and Dakar, Senegal, which align with our focus on high-potential markets with low seasonality and strong visiting friends and relatives demand. Performance across new routes has been very encouraging. and they are contributing positively to the overall network. Our program development continues to emphasize diversification across Africa, Europe, and South America, supporting a more balanced demand profile throughout the year. We have also expanded connectivity through strategic partnerships extending our reach beyond our own operated routes. Overall, these actions strengthen the network and support sustained demand across key markets as we continue to execute our network strategy.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Let me now address the situation in Cuba.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Early in the second fiscal quarter, we proactively suspended all flights to Cuba through April 30th due to an anticipated fuel shortage at destination airports, a situation outside of our control. Mindful of the safety and well-being of our customers, we quickly organized repatriation sites to ensure their safe return to Canada. This decision will have an impact on our second quarter results, as Cuba represented approximately 10% of our winter season capacity. To help mitigate this impact, we redeployed a portion of the affected capacity to other some destinations where we have observed increased demand. We will continue to closely monitor geopolitical developments and operating conditions to determine when flights to Cuba can safely and reliably resume. We also experienced a brief and localized operational disruption in Puerto Vallarta in February. Due to local conditions in the state of Jalisco, four flights to and from Puerto Vallarta were postponed over a two-day period with the safety of our passengers and crew guiding our decisions. Affected customers were contacted and offered flexible options and operations resumed promptly. These events temporarily affected consumer confidence and their impact was felt over the past few weeks. However, bookings to Mexico are gradually returning to expected levels. In January, we announced the framework of our new loyalty program, scheduled to launch in the second half of 2026. This program will feature a co-branded credit card developed in partnership with Desjardins Group and enabled by Visa, offering carholders enhanced travel benefits and exclusive rewards. Beyond strengthening customer engagement, the program is expected to create a new recurring revenue stream, support improved revenue quality, and drive higher low factors, allowing us to gain market share and create long-term value for trans-ex grants. Looking ahead to the second quarter of fiscal 2026, Despite the situation in Cuba discussed earlier, plant capacity represents an increase of approximately 5% year-over-year. To date, Q2 2026 yields are tracking in line with last year's level in a context of increased capacity. Low factors are 1.8 percentage points below the prior year with the unfavorable variant variance weighted primarily toward the back end of the quarter. Our network diversification strategy continues to deliver results with most new destinations performing positively and enhance connectivity with partners driving incremental passenger volumes across the network. For the full fiscal 2026, we anticipate capacity growth of approximately 5 to 7%. To wrap up, Transat delivered solid profitable growth in the first quarter of 2026, highlighting that our turnaround plan is working. We continue to reap benefits from initiatives put in place to improve our operations and to make sure that service excellence remains an essential part of Transat's DNA. Supported by a seasoned board of directors, Transat's management team can continue executing its growth plan to ensure the company reaches its sustained profitability. This concludes my remarks for today. Jean-Francois will now review our financial results. Jean-Francois?

speaker
Jean-François Pruneau
Chief Financial Officer

Christiane. We are pleased with our first quarter results, which show further revenue growth and profitability improvements. This performance reflects the ongoing execution of our plan, including our elevation optimization program. Looking more closely at our results, revenues reached $871 million, up 5% from last year. The growth was driven by a 2.2% traffic increase and a 1.4 percent yield improvement. We also recorded compensation revenue of $5 million from Pratt & Whitney related to the grounded aircraft during the quarter versus no such revenue a year ago. These factors were partially offset by continued inefficiencies stemming from ongoing Pratt & Whitney GTF engine issues, as well as by the negative impact of Hurricane Melissa in early November which led to flight cancellations to Jamaica despite the redeployment of capacity to other destinations. Adjusted EBITDA reached $34 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2026 compared to $20 million in the first quarter of last year. This improvement reflects higher revenue, while rigorous cost management limited the rise in operating expenses to only 1%. As higher costs associated with capacity growth and higher pilot compensation, were largely offset by better margins on vacation packages and lower fuel expenses. Both revenues and adjusted EBITDA also benefited from the gain delivered by our elevation initiatives. As a result, the net loss was $29 million, or 73 cents per share, in the first quarter of 2026, compared to a net loss of $123 million, or $3.10 per share, in the same period of 2025. Adjusted net loss was $48 million, or $1.19 per share, versus an adjusted net loss of $75 million, or $1.90 per share last year. Moving to cash flow and financial position, cash flows generated by operating activities amounted to $296 million in Q1 2026, up from $169 million in the first quarter of last year. This significant improvement reflects higher profitability and an increase in the net change in non-cash working capital balances. As for investing activities, first quarter CapEx was $14 million compared to $23 million a year ago. The prior year quarter also benefited from $31 million in proceeds from a sell-ease-back transaction involving one Pratt & Whitney GTF engine. After accounting for investing activities and repayment of lease liabilities, pre-cash flow was $247 million in Q1 2026, representing a significant improvement over $129 million in Q1 2025. Turning to our balance sheet, cash and cash equivalents totaled $387 million as of January 31, 2026, up from $165 million at the end of Q4 2025. Cash and cash equivalents and trusts are otherwise reserved, mainly resulting from travel package bookings, amounted to $528 million at the end of Q1 2026, up from $430 million at the end of the previous quarter, reflecting solid travel package bookings during the first quarter. Long-term debt and deferred government grants stood at $375 million as of January 31, 2026, down from $400 million three months ago and down from $813 million 12 months ago prior to our debt refinancing last summer. The quarter-over-quarter decrease reflects the repayment of $25 million on our revolving credit facility during the first quarter. In addition, At their period end, we repaid an amount of $30 million on our subordinated working capital facility, as our cash position was beyond a certain threshold, bringing total long-term debt and deferred government grants to $345 million. This facility remains available if needed. As a result, Transat had a net cash and cash equivalent position of $12 million at the end of Q1 2026, representing a significant improvement from a net debt position of $235 million three months earlier and $424 million a year ago. Looking ahead to the second quarter, as indicated by Annick, we anticipate that canceled flights to Cuba will affect results, but we have been able to partially mitigate the impact by redeploying a portion of our capacity to other routes. As for the upcoming summer season, Cuba only represents a very small portion of our capacity. At this stage, we do not expect any material effect beyond the current quarter. On the cost side, we will benefit from lower interest charges and from a stronger Canadian dollar versus the US currency. In parallel, benefits from elevation are expected to further ramp up. On the fuel expense side, I remind you that we have in place a hedging policy according to which we partially hedge our fuel expense against fuel price increases. As a result, our short-term exposure is limited as more than half of our consumption is subject to edging position. However, if the situation currently impacting fuel prices should persist, the impact will grow over time unless mitigating measures are implemented. Transat's foundation is stronger, and we have a well-defined strategy calling from calling for methodical expansion into high potential markets. A less levered balance sheet also provides us with more flexibility to carry out our plan. Our achievements this quarter demonstrate that Transat continues to progress in the right direction to create lasting value for our shareholders. This concludes my prepared comments. We will now open the call for questions from analysts.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question, press star 2. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from Cameron Darkson from National Bank. Please go ahead.

speaker
Cameron Darkson
Analyst, National Bank

Thanks. Good afternoon. Jean-François, you talked a little bit about the fuel hedging. Can you just maybe go into a little bit more detail on how you're protected You mentioned, I guess, 50% of short-term needs. I'm just wondering if you can sort of define short-term, and is there any, I guess, indicator you can give about kind of where you're hedged to kind of at what level?

speaker
Jean-François Pruneau
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. I will partially answer your questions, in fact. Okay. In terms of short-term, what we mean by short-term is the second quarter. So more than half of our consumption is currently short. subject to hedging positions, like I said. As for the summer, it's lower than half, but it's still providing a fairly good protection to fuel price increases. In terms of levels, unfortunately, I will not be able to disclose the levels at which we are hedged. Okay.

speaker
Cameron Darkson
Analyst, National Bank

I know in the past, you typically, I guess, hedge kind of in conjunction with when bookings come in. Is that still kind of the policy? It would You know, I guess if that's the case, it would sort of help us understand where you might have put in those hedges.

speaker
Jean-François Pruneau
Chief Financial Officer

That's a fair estimate, yes.

speaker
Cameron Darkson
Analyst, National Bank

Okay, perfect. And the other thing I guess I've noticed with Transat and with other Canadian airlines is that we have started to see fuel surcharges show up for international flights. I'm wondering, you know, how you see that as an additional protection against the spike in fuel we've seen. And, you know, I guess any experience in the past, about how sticky some of those fuel surges have been and how effective they've been in protecting you from fuel price spikes in the past.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

We've got a couple of experience and you know that sudden spikes in fuel price are never easy to pass through in the short term. This is historical and we look at the data Tickets that are already sold can be repriced, of course, and if we raise fares immediately, we see a negative impact on demand. So we're always looking at a fair balance. So in some actions that we've taken so far, we have increased fuel surcharges on Europe. However, this is blended in the total price. What we're also doing is currently raising fares on peak travel dates and routes where we see less competition, where we have more flexibility. And we are looking as well at optimizing and salary revenues, which, you know, there's a couple of areas where we can improve our position. Depending on how long this is going to last, hopefully it's not going to last too long. Nobody wants that. We could be pushed to look at different measures, looking even at cutting capacity if required, but we're not at this point right now. But we're really doing anything we have to do in place, including restricting our expenses, across the company to make sure that we're going to be able to deal with that fuel spike.

speaker
Cameron Darkson
Analyst, National Bank

That's very helpful. I'll pass the line. Thanks very much.

speaker
Conference Moderator
Moderator

Thanks, Cameron.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Your next question comes from Benoit Poirier from Desjardins. Please go ahead.

speaker
Benoit Poirier
Analyst, Desjardins

Yeah. Good afternoon, everyone, and congrats for the announcement around the loyalty program. So could you maybe, Annick, talk about the benefits you expect from this loyalty program down the road and kind of the timing of when you see the things happening?

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Yeah, of course. So we've announced the partnership that we have with Desjardins, so the beginning of January. For us, it represents a core long-term asset for Transat with significant value creation. If you've looked at the airline industry overall, more often than not, a loyalty program gets a value that is even more higher than the core business itself. So we've developed an innovative design specifically around our leisure and VFR customer base, and we want to make sure that there is a strong natural fit with our customer profiles and behavior. For us, the objectives, of course, are to create a new recurring revenue stream, support improved revenue quality. We want to drive higher load factors. Based on the analysis that we've conducted, it will allow us to gain market share. We estimate that not having a loyalty program prevents us from a four to five market share today. And again, we want to strengthen customer engagement. So we think we have the right tool that's going to be deployed next fall to be able to capture all this value.

speaker
Benoit Poirier
Analyst, Desjardins

That's great. And Nick, you now have a revamped board of directors. What would you expect from your new board members and what should be their focus in the short term?

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Well, I think the most, first of all, I want to thank all the board members that were with us over the last years. I think the They support us very well and made a tremendous effort in stabilizing the company. The last year has been very difficult for Transat, and we're very thankful to the work and the support they have provided the organization. As to moving forward, of course, We are in the process of integrating or finalizing all the initiatives around elevation programs, so they are going to be overseeing the value that we need to deliver by mid-2026, the $100 million in EBITDA, so that's going to be one of their key priorities. And the other one is that we're working on developing the next phase of our strategic plan, which is extremely important and we will share in due time. So that's going to be part of their job. I would say that's the key main point of focus.

speaker
Benoit Poirier
Analyst, Desjardins

Okay, that's great. And maybe last question. Obviously, it looks like that we need to be agile these days with the situation in the U.S., Mexico, Cuba, and the Middle East. You've talked about it, but what about the latest trend in booking, and where do you see, Annick, the greatest momentum among the regions that Transat serves right now?

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

They're still, well, overall, they're still strong. On Europe, that's our first market, and all the destinations are performing very well when we look at summer. So we're very comfortable with those. The advantage that we have in self-destination is that we offer a broad range of different destinations. So when one suffers, like we see right now in Cuba, we are able to display some capacity and improve move it towards Dominican Republic, for instance. So Dominican Republic, Costa Rica are very popular these days. Mexico has been a little tough over the last few days, but it remains a super well-established destination and one of Canadians' favorites. As for Cuba, you know, it is a very popular destination. Our intention is to resume operation as soon as conditions allow. But we need to – it's always been our priority to diversify our network in some destinations so that when it doesn't go well in one, such as, you know, a big hurricane or something, we have the flexibility to bring our customers elsewhere. And this is what we're doing right now.

speaker
Benoit Poirier
Analyst, Desjardins

And if I remember, Anik Kuba has been seen as the lowest margin region in the past. I don't know if it's still the case, but given the mix that you see right now, should we expect a benefit in terms of margins or it creates some inefficiencies that it's tougher to navigate in the short term?

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

There's price point products everywhere. when you look at Dominican Republic, when you look at Mexico. So there's very, you know, products for everyone. The other thing that you need to understand as well, unfortunately, having less demand towards Cuba, well, the hoteliers in Mexico and Dominican Republic are increasing their fares. So that's not helping us necessarily in terms of producing higher margins. But, you know, we're trying to find the right balance for our customers at different price points so that, you know, everybody finds what they're looking for.

speaker
Benoit Poirier
Analyst, Desjardins

Okay. That's a great caller. Thanks, Annie.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

You're welcome. Your next question comes from Tim James from TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

speaker
Tim James
Analyst, TD Cowen

Thanks very much. My first question, I'm just wondering if you could talk about what your CapEx expectations are for the full year fiscal 26, and maybe if you can shed any light on what you see for fiscal 27.

speaker
Jean-François Pruneau
Chief Financial Officer

Well, in terms of 27, it's a bit too early to talk about that. In terms of 2026, Q1 specifically, we've spent $10 million less than last year in terms of CapEx. There was some timing issues or timing issues elements that are explaining the lower CAPEX this quarter. So there will be some kind of catch-up. So if you include that catch-up and you pro forma that for a full year, you'll be very close to what we expect as CAPEX spending. Okay.

speaker
Tim James
Analyst, TD Cowen

And then, just the reference to a bit of weakness late in the quarter, is it fair to assume that's sort of a reference to Cuba and to Mexico?

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

You're talking about Q2?

speaker
Tim James
Analyst, TD Cowen

I'm talking about, I believe, Q1. I don't have the text in front of me, but I believe it was a reference to the first quarter.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Q1 was mostly affected by the impact of Hurricane Melissa, so Jamaica. So we had to suspend flights to Jamaica for several weeks. And the destination never came back to the previous level. So about 50% of the hotels are still closed for the season, the whole winter. So this has been affected at Q1. But besides that, whatever is around Cuba arrive at the beginning of Q2. So it's going to be affecting Q2 mostly. Okay.

speaker
Tim James
Analyst, TD Cowen

Okay.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Thank you. And we have really, like the Jaffa Express, Cuba during summer, we don't have a lot of capacity. So it's not going to be significant.

speaker
Tim James
Analyst, TD Cowen

Right. Okay. And I'm just curious, I mean, with the developments in the Middle East, the war in Iran, are you, I realize obviously you don't fly there, but I'm just wondering if there's any sort of impact on your bookings at all? Just, you know, travelers being a little bit more nervous about heading overseas. Are you seeing any indication of that impacting your bookings?

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

First, we're very sad about, you know, what's going on, like everybody else, what's going on in Iran and about, you know, the people that are affected by the conflict. On our side, there has not been direct impact on our operations per se. Besides maybe a little bit of softness over the last two weeks and the booking curve on Istanbul that we offer Istanbul, but it's only one route and we go there twice a week out of Toronto, so it's very limited. The main impact for us is going to be, when we look at Israel, of course, it's going to be on fuel overall. But we haven't seen... a lack of confidence from our customers in their willingness, you know, to travel. So booking trends are still strong. People are traveling south and Europe. Europe first, you know, when we're looking at summer. So depending on what's going to happen with the conflict, At this point, we believe it's going to remain in a certain perimeter, and we're not going to be that affected, besides fuel, again, the impact on the fuel cost.

speaker
Conference Moderator
Moderator

Okay. Okay. Thank you, Annie. Appreciate the comments.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from Alexander Ogimery from CIBC. Please go ahead.

speaker
Alexander Ogimery
Analyst, CIBC

Hi, thanks for taking my question. Just looking at your elevation program, can you maybe quantify how much of the $100 million in adjusted operating income was captured thus far? And I was wondering if you see any opportunities for upside in that $100 million target?

speaker
Jean-François Pruneau
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, no, we're still on track for the $100 million target for mid-2026. We're probably close to $70 million that is already embedded in RPM.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Do you see upside?

speaker
Jean-François Pruneau
Chief Financial Officer

There's always upside. We're always working on new initiatives. It's a new way to work on different projects. It's a new way to explore for different initiatives that will help on the cost side and on the revenue side. So the elevation program is not the end of it. We will continue to evolve and find new initiatives.

speaker
Annie Guérard
President and CEO

Over the last months, we have embedded our ways of working being much more, I would say, diligent and rigorous in engaging people to find opportunities within the organization to either increase revenues or decrease costs. So we see some initiatives that are popping up and that are going to be promising for the future. And with the arrival of AI, which is ongoing, we're looking at every opportunity within the company, either on the efficiency side or on the value creation for customer side. So that's going to be going on for the upcoming months and upcoming years.

speaker
Conference Moderator
Moderator

Okay, great. Thanks for answering my questions. I can turn it back.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

And there are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to Adriane for closing remarks.

speaker
Andreanne Gagné
Senior Director, Communications

Thank you, everyone, for attending and asking your questions. As a reminder, our 2026 second quarter results will be released in June. Thank you, and have a good day.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect. Merci.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

-

-