Jefferies reinstates Wheels Up coverage by increasing estimated revenue based on strong demand and prepaid membership blocks
Wheels Up’s lagging stock price received a boost earlier this week when Jefferies reinstated coverage with a Buy rating.
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Wheels Up’s lagging stock price received a boost earlier this week when Jefferies reinstated coverage with a Buy rating.
With seven analysts now following a publicly traded Wheels Up, management will be answering questions during its Q3 earnings call. The date, set earlier today, is Nov. 10.
Ready or not, Kenny Dichter and Wheels Up plan to change the face of private jet access. It’s a big leap from marketing ploys like selling memberships through Costco. Beyond stump speeches at industry conferences, there will be the harsh spotlight from being a publicly traded company. If he’s successful, the lifelong entrepreneur will find his name alongside aviation innovators such as Pan Am founder Juan Trippe, former American Airlines chairman Robert Crandall, who ignited revenue management and frequent flyer programs, and inventor of fractional private jet ownership, Richard Santulli. The latter created NetJets, the world’s largest private jet operator, and gave Dichter his entree into the industry. In fact, Dichter might fly higher than all of them. Success would make Dichter the Jeff Bezos of private jets.
In a two-hour presentation to financial analysts Friday morning, the founder and CEO of Wheels Up, along with his leadership team, discussed various milestones, projected growth, and insights on where it’s coming from. More than that, they unveiled a dramatic vision for a private aviation marketplace they say could more than double the addressable market by 2025, democratizing the segment down to low single-digit millionaires. It will certainly be key in their plan to grow revenues from $695 million last year to over $2.1 billion by 2025.