5 Reasons I Just Bought Southwest Airlines Stock

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The airline industry has historically been a lousy one to invest in. It's sensitive to the economy, capital-intensive, highly regulated, and hypercompetitive. Making matters worse has been poor management decisions by some of the top airlines that have led to numerous bankruptcies over the years.

But with all the bankruptcies, wars, fuel-cost spikes, and recessions, Southwest Airlines (NYSE: LUV) has stood tall for almost half a century. An early investment in Southwest would make even Walmart millionaires jealous.

I don't expect Southwest to be a home-run investment, but I do think it can outperform the broader market. Here are the main reasons I decided to buy shares of the low-fare giant recently.

An airplane sitting on a runway.
An airplane sitting on a runway.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Industry-leading profitability

Since its founding in the 1970s, Southwest has prided itself on delivering best-in-class service and competitive fares. The formula of flying short routes, driving up productivity by flying one type of aircraft, and stripping out extraneous operating costs like in-flight meals has made Southwest the industry's most profitable airline since the late 1970s. Even with smaller airlines like Spirit Airlines trying to copy the low-cost model, Southwest still maintains industry-leading margins and returns on invested capital.

Southwest is the only airline that has turned a profit for 46 consecutive years, and that's while its competitors, including American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United (now United Continental Holdings, US Airways (now operated by American Airlines), and TWA filed for bankruptcy between 2000 and 2011.

2. Industry-leading financial fortitude

Southwest is the only airline with a credit rating of A- or better from the credit rating firm Moody's. The company has more cash than debt on its balance sheet and generated $2.97 billion in free cash flow over the past year.

The company's financial strength makes it a good dividend stock, too. The dividend yield is currently below average at 1.23%, but that's because Southwest pays out only 14% of its earnings as dividends. The important thing is that Southwest has increased the dividend by 236% over the past five years.

With a low payout, a history of raising the dividend, and growth initiatives underway (more on this below), Southwest should be a great dividend growth stock for years to come.

3. Valuation

I love looking for fast-growing companies that could become multibaggers, but I equally enjoy looking for industry leaders that are on sale.

Southwest stock is cheap. It trades for a trailing P/E of 12.3 and a forward P/E of 10 based on next year's earnings estimates. That's at the low end of its trading range over the past 10 years. This is for a company that analysts expect to grow earnings by 12% per year over the next five years.