Southwest Chair Kelly to step down next year as activist Elliott pushes for changes at airline

Southwest Chair Kelly to step down next year as activist Elliott pushes for changes at airline


A Southwest Airlines plane takes off from Hollywood Burbank Airport above other Southwest planes on July 25, 2024 in Burbank, California. 

Mario Tama | Getty Images

Southwest Airlines said Tuesday that executive chairman and former CEO Gary Kelly will retire next year and announced a board shakeup, moves that comes as the carrier faces pressure for changes by activist investor Elliott Investment Management.

“Now is the time for change. It’s time to shake things up, not just stir them a bit,” Kelly said in a letter to shareholders. “The wisdom comes in knowing what to change and what not to change.”

Kelly, who has worked at Southwest for nearly four decades and has been chairman since the carrier’s co-founder, Herb Kelleher, retired in 2008, announced he would step down hours after a meeting with Elliott, which has been calling for leadership changes at the Dallas-based carrier.

Elliott in June revealed a nearly $2 billion stake in Southwest, seeking to oust leadership, including CEO Bob Jordan, who has also spent nearly four decades at the carrier. The firm said Southwest has had “stunning underperformance” under their leadership.

On Tuesday, Kelly’s statement said Southwest’s board and leadership “unanimously support Bob Jordan as CEO.”

Six of Southwest’s board members will retire in November, and the company will appoint four new independent directors “in the near future, including due consideration of up to three of Elliott’s candidates,” Kelly said.

Southwest has also brought in outside experts, including Bob Fornaro, former CEO of Spirit Airlines and AirTran, which Southwest acquired.

The carrier has struggled as it faces an oversupplied domestic U.S. market, higher costs and aircraft delivery delays from Boeing, its sole supplier.

Southwest for years resisted changes to its simple business model that changed the U.S. airline industry, and earned nearly unbroken decades of profits, which helped it build an investment-grade balance sheet.

But in July, it announced it would offer extra legroom on its aircraft and do away with its open seating policy, the biggest changes in its more than 50 years of flying. It also plans to over overnight, or “redeye” flights next year.

Southwest has an investor day scheduled for Sept. 26 in Dallas to expand on these and other initiatives.

Elliott did not immediately comment Tuesday morning.

This is breaking news. Please refresh for updates.



Source

‘Superman’ snares .5 million in Thursday previews on way to 0 million opening
Business

‘Superman’ snares $22.5 million in Thursday previews on way to $140 million opening

David Corenswet stars are Superman in Warner Bros.’ “Superman.” Warner Bros. Discovery It’s not a bird or a plane that soared into cinemas Thursday night — it was Warner Bros.’ “Superman.” The first film in the new era of DC films under James Gunn and Peter Safran snared $22.5 million from preview showings. It’s the […]

Read More
Levi Strauss raises sales guidance, says it will absorb some tariff costs for now
Business

Levi Strauss raises sales guidance, says it will absorb some tariff costs for now

Levi Strauss raised its full-year guidance Thursday and said it’s working to absorb some of the costs it’s facing from higher tariffs, but that could change as President Donald Trump’s trade policy evolves.  The denim maker doesn’t disclose its key manufacturing hubs, but much of its supply comes from Southeast Asia. Many countries in the […]

Read More
IMAX is headed for its best year on record as it capitalizes on Hollywood’s box office rebound
Business

IMAX is headed for its best year on record as it capitalizes on Hollywood’s box office rebound

General atmosphere during an IMAX private screening for the movie “First Man” at an AMC theater in New York City on Oct. 10, 2018. Lars Niki | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images More than a year before “F1: The Movie” would eventually hit theaters, Apple struck a deal with IMAX. The studio secured the […]

Read More