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Can Southwest (LUV) Turn a Weaker 2025 Outlook into a Stronger Long-Term Revenue Model?

Simply Wall St·12/08/2025 05:11:56
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  • In early December 2025, Southwest Airlines cut its 2025 earnings outlook to about US$500 million after weaker demand during the U.S. government shutdown and higher fuel costs, even though bookings have since returned to earlier expectations.
  • Ahead of launching assigned seating, extra-legroom options, and a broadened international network through partners like Condor in 2026, Southwest is reshaping both its revenue model and customer experience at the same time it absorbs these cost and demand shocks.
  • We’ll now examine how the downgraded 2025 earnings outlook, driven by shutdown-related demand softness and fuel costs, reshapes Southwest’s investment narrative.

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Southwest Airlines Investment Narrative Recap

To own Southwest today, you need to believe it can restore earnings power while overhauling its product and pricing. The cut to 2025 EBIT guidance to about US$500 million sharpens focus on execution: the key near term catalyst is monetizing assigned and premium seating in early 2026, while the biggest risk is that softer or choppier demand and higher fuel costs keep squeezing margins longer than expected. The latest guidance change does not remove that risk, it simply makes it more visible.

Among the recent announcements, the new Condor partnership stands out as most relevant. It expands Southwest’s role as a feeder for transatlantic traffic just as the airline shifts to assigned and extra legroom seating from January 27, 2026, giving it more ways to price seats and test whether these product upgrades can offset cost pressure and support the earnings recovery investors are watching for.

But even if bookings hold up, investors should still be aware of how exposed Southwest is to fuel price swings and...

Read the full narrative on Southwest Airlines (it's free!)

Southwest Airlines’ narrative projects $32.6 billion revenue and $1.9 billion earnings by 2028. This assumes 5.9% yearly revenue growth and an earnings increase of about $1.5 billion from $392.0 million today.

Uncover how Southwest Airlines' forecasts yield a $34.23 fair value, a 10% downside to its current price.

Exploring Other Perspectives

LUV Community Fair Values as at Dec 2025
LUV Community Fair Values as at Dec 2025

Seven Simply Wall St Community valuations for Southwest span roughly US$8 to US$46 per share, showing how far apart individual views can be. As you weigh those opinions, remember that the airline’s earnings reset to about US$500 million of 2025 EBIT and its reliance on new product initiatives put real focus on how much pricing power it can actually achieve.

Explore 7 other fair value estimates on Southwest Airlines - why the stock might be worth less than half the current price!

Build Your Own Southwest Airlines Narrative

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This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.