With oil prices surpassing $132 per barrel today for the first time ever, American Airlines (AMR) has reacted by raising prices. Most notably the airline will charge travelers $15 to check a bag. The company calls this a "revenue growth initiative" in their press release, but it is really just silly. When high fuel prices are pressuring an already bloated cost structure and a weak economy is reducing air travel, price increases are not going to help AMR. It simply does not address the problem.
In such a competitive industry, weak players increasing fees will only result in more people going to discount airlines, which are run far better than their larger counterparts. There is a reason Southwest Airlines (LUV) has been taking market share and has never lost money in any year since its founding more than three decades ago and it is not because they started to charge their customers for things like checking baggage. In fact, they have used those boneheaded ideas in their brilliant marketing campaigns:
The problem for AMR and the rest of the airlines that go bankrupt every five or ten years (this time will be no different) is that they rarely directly tackle the problems that are causing them to bleed red ink. Raising prices in a price sensitive industry reduces revenue and does nothing to address bloated costs. The airlines need to get their costs in line with their revenues. It is not rocket science; Southwest and JetBlue (JBLU) have done wonderfully over the years.
The AMR story is not very much different than the management of our federal government lately. Gas prices are crippling lower class Americans? Okay, then we will give them tax rebate checks and tell them to go out and spend that money on $4 gasoline. How does that solve the problem? As Dr. Phil would say, "money problems are not solved with more money."
All the government is doing is paying us to buy gas when buying gas is exactly what is causing fuel prices to be so high in the first place. We are sending money straight to the oil executives and the nations who export their oil to us. This transfer of wealth, both from poor to rich and from the U.S. to the oil producing nations, doesn't even begin to address the energy problems we face. As 5% of the world's population using 25% of the world's oil, paying our citizens to buy gas is the last thing we need.
As long as these are the things that AMR and the government are doing about sky-high oil prices, the investment strategy is not very difficult to pin down: stay long oil producers, foreign currencies, and the rich and stay short the airlines, the dollar, and the poor.
Full Disclosure: No positions in the companies mentioned at the time of writing