Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. My name is Krista, and I will be your conference operator today.
At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Air Canada Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise.
After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Valerie Durand, Head of Investor Relations and Corporate Sustainability. Valerie, you may begin.
Valerie Durand
Thank you, Krista. [Foreign Language] Welcome and thank you for attending our fourth quarter and year-end 2024 earnings call.
Joining us this morning are Michael Rousseau, our President and CEO; Mark Galardo, our EVP of Revenue and Network Planning and President of Cargo; and John Di Bert, our EVP and CFO. Other executives are with us as well, Arielle Meloul, our Chief Human Resources Officer and Public Affairs; Craig Landry, our Chief Operations Officer; Marc Barbeau, our Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary; and Mark Nasr, our EVP of Marketing and Digital and President of Aeroplan.
After our prepared remarks, we will take questions from equity analysts. I remind you that today's comments and discussion may contain forward-looking information about Air Canada's outlook, objectives and strategies that are based on assumptions and subject to risks and uncertainties.
Our actual results could differ materially from any stated expectations. Please refer to our forward-looking statements in Air Canada's fourth quarter and year-end news release available on aircanada.com and on SEDAR+.
And now I'd like to turn the call to Mike. Mike?
Michael Rousseau
Thank you, Valerie, and good morning, bonjour. Thank you for joining us a little bit earlier than usual.
Last night, we reported strong fourth quarter year-end results for 2024. This included a record full year revenue of $22.3 billion, increasing 2% on a 5% increase in capacity.
We finished the year with $3.6 billion of adjusted EBITDA, which is just above our adjusted EBITDA guidance communicated on December 17, 2024. We also generated free cash flow of $1.3 billion and adjusted pre-tax income of $1.4 billion in 2024.
These results reflected a strong revenue environment. Unit revenues turned positive in November and December having recovered from declines in Q2 and Q3.
We are committed on executing on our plan. We have demonstrated our ability to adapt and make the most of the opportunities that arise.
I'd like to call out four major achievements. First, we successfully delivered these strong results by recognizing and making changes we needed in the face of the challenges during the year.
For instance, the world experienced geopolitical disruption, lagging impact from inflation and lingering supply chain issues. Where necessary, we adjusted course and acted resourcefully and shifting capacity to where it made more sense.
Second, we secured a new agreement with our pilots, all significant disruption to our operations. This also highlights the commitment of all stakeholders to Air Canada's long-term success and dedication to customers.
Third, we saw pronounced operational improvements last year with an 8-point gain on on-time performance over 2023. Our drive for operational excellence remains continuously on display.
And finally, we bought back and canceled over 35 million shares, completing the normal course issuer bid program that we announced in November. I'm immensely proud of these results, which would not have been achieved without everyone at Air Canada working as one.
Our 40,000 employees showed their dedication and professionalism by safely transporting more than 47 million passengers over the course of the year, and I commend them for their commitment and their hard work. I also thank our customers for their loyalty to Air Canada.
We strive every day to provide them industry-leading products and services. We are already the leading premium carrier in Canada, and we will continue to assert ourselves as a global champion.
We are fully focused on executing our strategic plan. That includes managing through any uncertainty, pivoting when needed as we pursue our ambitious goals.
At our recent Investor Day, we shared key targets we set for 2028. These include $30 billion in operating revenues, at least a 17% adjusted EBITDA margin and approximately 5% free cash flow margin.
We continue to be disciplined with our decisions as well as agile. Mark and John will provide more commentary on the year ahead.
We have all the necessary tools and attributes to achieve our goals, and we look forward to sharing more updates moving forward. Thank you.
Mark, over to you.
Mark Galardo
Thanks, Merci, Mike and good morning, bonjour. [Foreign Language] Thanks to all our employees for their contribution to our quarterly and year-end results.
I'll begin with a quick overview of Q4. Operating revenues were more than $5.4 billion, up 4% year-over-year with growth in all revenue categories.
The year ended with an improved revenue environment as PRASM turned positive in November and December driven by our transborder and Atlantic services. It is worth noting that Q4 2024 produced record fourth quarter revenue for Air Canada despite the impact felt in the first two weeks of October from the labor uncertainty a month earlier.
Looking to the full year, passenger revenues were nearly $20 billion, a 2% increase year-over-year, with significant growth coming from our expansion in the Pacific, most notably in Japan, Korea and Hong Kong. Pacific traffic grew 25% year-over-year on a yield decline of 6%, which was within our expectations.
Supply and demand balance in the region and the normalized environment led to pricing stabilization. North America also performed well with yields increasing from last year.
This is remarkable given the competitive environment in the region. And we manage capacity diligently by adding 20% more capacity to the Pacific, and reducing our Atlantic flying in 2024.
Our network diversity is a key strength of the business and in true form, we will continue making dynamic necessary and timely adjustments on our network based on market conditions. A combination of factors impacted the performance across the Atlantic in 2024 at large: firstly, we believe that competitive capacity grew at a faster pace than the market could absorb in the peak summer period; and secondly, that the geopolitical instability and large sporting events during the European center impacted traffic and yields in the region.
However, as evidenced by our Q4 numbers, the pricing environment improved in the second half of the year. Demand for European travel has extended into the spring and fall shoulder seasons, effectively stretching the traditional seasonality of the Atlantic market.
The stability in exchange rate versus the year has also been positive for customers traveling to Europe. Let’s now turn to our Sixth Freedom strategy.
It continues to yield robust results with revenues growing 12% year-over-year. Sixth Freedom traffic is a core pillar of our commercial strategy, our results signify the geographic advantage of our hubs and reinforce our corresponding long-term investments on these flows.
Our well-established premium product yielded great results increasing 5% from 2023 and reaching 29% of total passenger revenue. On Cargo, Q4 revenues increased 20% year-over-year as market dynamics progressed through 2024.
More importantly, this was driven by increased volumes and improved yields. We’re very encouraged by these results.
And on a full year basis, Cargo performed solidly recording a 7% increase in revenues to nearly $1 billion in 2024. We’re very pleased with the progress of our freighter operations.
Air Canada Vacations celebrated its 50th anniversary this week, and continue to deliver strong performance on annual revenues exceeding those of 2024. As we begin 2025, we acknowledge that there are external pressures, such as currency and uncertainty on other fronts.
It’s still premature to discuss the potential impact, if any, of actual or potential regulatory tariffs or possible retaliations. We’re diligently and continuously monitoring customer behavior and market dynamics.
If the shift in the future, we have ample flexibility to respond by moving capacity around as we’ve always done. For now, here’s what we’re seeing.
The revenue environment experienced in Q4 2024 is continuing into 2025. January booking trends have aligned with our expectations despite some uncertainty.
We see encouraging booking trends and yield signals for Q2 and into Q3. Keep in mind, the shift of Easter from March 2024 to April 2025 naturally shifts revenues to Q2 which will translate into less relevant compares year-over-year Q1.
We are proactively acting in specific markets like certain U.S. leisure destinations such as Florida, Vegas and Arizona.
As such, we are reducing our capacity exposure to these markets from March onward. And we continue to see encouraging signals around Sixth Freedom demand and overall, a meaningful rebound in our transatlantic market for the spring and summer season.
Demand for some markets continues to surpass our expectations and the booking curve has shifted to a more closed environment. As we see recovery on the Atlantic, we have and will continue to look at some capacity shifts away from Asia, where overall market capacity is up substantially.
The short-term effects from Pacific yield normalization are expected for the next few quarters. We have witnessed and continue to anticipate a more disciplined and predictable competitive environment in our core markets.
And lastly, our revenue management tactics, such as branded fare adjustments are delivering better-than-expected results. As we stated at Investor Day, we believe Air Canada has one of the strongest foundations in our history.
Our hubs are geographically well positioned, we have an efficient fleet with global reach, enabling Sixth Freedom growth and diversifying our customer base and points of sale. Canada’s demographic growth, combined with decades of past, present and future immigration, is expected to translate into higher growth for international demand.
Our diverse product range, including our well-established premium offerings, deals to a broad range of customers globally. We are a disciplined and nimble team proven ability to execute and deliver results.
That said, thank you, John and over to you.
John Di Bert
Thanks, Mark. Good morning, everyone.
[Foreign Language] A special thank for our employees for their incredible energy in helping us deliver our results for Q4 and the full year. It was truly a great team effort.
[Foreign Language] We achieved a record adjusted EBITDA of $696 million in the fourth quarter, with a margin of 12.9%, representing a year-over-year increase of $175 million and almost three percentage points, respectively. This result was largely driven by the strong revenue and favorable fuel environment at the end of the year.
You heard it from Mark, we're encouraged by the early positive signals for our summer schedule. In Q4, operating expenses increased 11%.
This largely reflects the onetime noncash past service pension charge of $490 million we disclosed last quarter in relation to our new pilot collective agreement. This is reflected in the salaries, wages and benefits line.
Adjusting out this nonrecurring charge, Q4 expenses were higher by 1% year-over-year. Turning to the full year.
We generated an adjusted EBITDA of $3.6 billion, which was slightly ahead of our guidance and mostly fueled by the solid revenue performance at the end of the year. Adjusted EBITDA margin surpassed 16% in 2024.
Despite a year-over-year decline of $396 million in adjusted EBITDA and a two percentage point margin compression for 2023 and 2024 was a solid year, but up against compared tough compares from an exceptional rebound in 2023. Our operating expenses grew 7% and salaries, wages and benefits were up 11% year-over-year, excluding the onetime pension charge I mentioned earlier.
Fuel prices were a tailwind averaging $1.01 per liter in 2024 and versus $1.12 in 2023. ASMs per employee increased 1.4% in 2024 year-over-year.
This illustrates early-stage productivity gains in our business. Turning to unit cost.
Adjusted CASM increased 2.3% year-over-year, in line with our full year expectations. We remain focused on managing controllable costs and delivering productivity gains as we grow.
2024 produced another solid year of free cash flow generation. We delivered $3.9 billion in cash from operations and $1.3 billion in free cash flow, effectively producing $1 of cash for every dollar of adjusted net income.
As to our planned fleet, you may refer to our disclosure for details. Note that the 787-10s are shifting to the right, and we have revised our Boeing 737 MAX leases and now expect a total of seven aircraft to enter service in 2025.
During 2024, we executed our capital allocation priorities exactly as planned. We continue to improve our balance sheet, being down approximately $2 billion in debt.
We refinanced and repriced our Term Loan B and we deployed $473 million of excess liquidity, purchased more than 20 million shares for cancellation. And earlier this week, we completed the full repurchase of shares allowable under the NCIB we announced on our Q3 call in November 2024.
We expect to further reduce our fully diluted share count by cash settling our outstanding convertible notes that mature in July 2025. As highlighted at our recent Investor Day, we aim to reduce our diluted outstanding share count from 376 million at the end of the third quarter of 2024 to $300 million or less by 2028.
Our objectives are clear. Invest in the airline to fund our future, which will allow ourselves to grow revenues and expand margins to protect our balance sheet strength by focusing on free cash flow generation to maintain net leverage below two turns and deploy excess liquidity to create shareholder value.
Today, we maintain the 2025 guidance we provided at Investor Day. We will continue to monitor economic environment, including the potential impact of tariffs, if any.
I remind you that our current guidance does not assume any such impact direct or indirect. As a matter of discipline, we rely on a robust fact-based process to make our decisions.
We have to focus on what we know and control while being mindful of external forces that may affect our plan throughout. So here's what we know from the current environment and the outcome of our process.
First, as Mark said, the revenue environment experienced in Q4 2024 is continuing into 2025. Demand remains stable, and we see positive booking trends and yield signals for Q2 and into Q3.
Second, the fuel environment is favorable and is holding in a relatively stable range in U.S. dollars.
We also have a well-established, disciplined and agile fuel procurement process, multiple and flexible sources across the globe allowing us to diversify supply. Third, we have a well-established foreign exchange hedging program in which we hedge approximately 70% of our U.S.
dollar cash flow requirements on an 18-month rolling basis. As at year-end, we had an outstanding FX derivatives settling in 2025 and 2026, to purchase at maturity, US$6.9 billion at a weighted average rate of $1.35 per U.S.
dollar. While our adjusted EBITDA is sensitive to currency fluctuations, the cash flow hedging program does protect against free cash flow volatility.
We are disciplined and agile. We have fleet flexibility, a strong and resilient balance sheet and a responsible risk profile.
We are prepared to adapt promptly to tackle any potential changes or challenges. We remain committed to our planning.
Thank you. And with that, over to you, Mike.
Michael Rousseau
Great. Thank you, John.
The clear message of our fourth quarter and full year results is that Air Canada is pursuing its strategic plan and is advancing on its commitments. Many attributes for computing effectively are key to our plan and give us the agility course truck when needed.
These include our strong balance sheet, global network, modern fleet and digital capability, strong partnerships and leading products and services, especially in premium as well as Aeroplan and is best travel loyalty program. In fact, our award-winning loyalty program had another record year, reaching new highs and active members begin to redemption volumes and third-party gross billings, which rose 10% to $1.8 billion in 2024.
We’re also pleased that Aeroplan continues building upon its industry-leading roster of partners, launch of Manulife and expanded Marriott partnership in 2024. We have other incredible attributes as well.
We include our decisive management team and highly motivated employees who are bound together by a strong corporate culture and their outstanding commitment to execution and dedication to customer service excellence. We are in a great position to build on last year’s remarkable success.
Our disciplined and dedicated team is well prepared to effectively manage any uncertainty and external pressures. The demand environment continues to be favorable, and we are poised to capitalize on opportunities.
We’ll continue to adapt and thrive in an ever-changing aviation industry. Thank you, [indiscernible] and we will now be pleased to take your questions.
Valerie?
Valerie Durand
Thank you, Mike. Thank you very much for joining us on our Q4 and full year results call this morning.
We remind you to please restrict yourself to one question and one follow-up, please. [Foreign Language] Back to you, Krista.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Kevin Chiang with CIBC.
Please go ahead.
Kevin Chiang
Hi, thanks. Good morning, and thanks for taking my question.
Maybe I can just dig into some of the demand comments you made, maybe specifically on the booking curve as we kind of look out maybe into Q2, Q2, I think you mentioned the yield environment looks good. But maybe just how the booking curve is trending relative to maybe prior years?
And you did mention it sounds like you’re adjusting some of the capacity into U.S. leisure markets.
Is that a function of some shift in Canadian consumer behavior flying into the U.S. given all that’s happened with tariffs?
And is that capacity being, I guess, put into other markets, you’re seeing better growth? Or are you maybe just proactively adjusting that for other reasons?
Any color there would be helpful.
Mark Galardo
Sure. Good morning, Kevin.
For Q2, the booking outlook on the booking curve looks pretty similar to last year. One notable difference is the fact that Easter shifted from March to April this year, so that changes the dynamic a little bit favorable for Q2.
We are proactively looking at capacity to U.S. leisure destinations.
And we feel that we’ve got enough opportunity elsewhere in the network to redeploy that capacity. There might be some opportunity in domestic, and we see some opportunity in Sun leisure markets as well.
So if we do see some softness on the U.S. side because we're not seeing it close in just yet, and offset it with some difficult changes.
Kevin Chiang
Okay. That's helpful.
And maybe just in terms of – to the second question here, I guess, what the weaker FX, how does that change your revenue management system, whether it's point of sale out of the U.S. or sixth freedom traffic.
Are you seeing more dollar – U.S. dollar revenue flowing through your revenue line?
Is that something proactively you're doing just to adjust to the FX environment?
Mark Galardo
Absolutely. Our revenue management systems are very sophisticated.
And like we said at Investor Day, we can change our revenue management algorithms to be much more open to U.S. inbound traffic and as well U.S.
sixth freedom traffic, which going into Q2 and Q3 look very favorable. So certainly an area of opportunity for us.
Kevin Chiang
Perfect. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Savi Syth with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Savi, you may be on mute.
Savi Syth
Thank you. Good morning.
Just – can I ask about like what you're seeing on the corporate side? I know you did – you had a considerable effort on expanding your SME accounts and then you have all this kind of geopolitical noise.
And curious what you've seen in the fourth quarter and then what you're seeing here in the first quarter in terms of corporate travel demand and how that's progressing?
Mark Galardo
Yes. No, thanks, Savi.
Good question. For Q4, what we did witness was a stronger-than-expected bounce back in corporate travel.
In some cases, it was almost double digits better year-over-year. Like we said, largely experienced in the transporter sector, and going into Q1, we see that continuing.
And in terms of our SME, SMB program, we're above the targets right now internally. So that's favorable.
Savi Syth
Helpful. Thank you.
If I might – just on the seasonality question, just a follow-up on the ATL, your kind of forward ticket sales, historically, there's been a pretty big shift kind of move up from the third quarter to fourth quarter. But last year and this year, it looks like a very pretty flat move.
And I was just wondering if there's anything different that's driving that kind of seasonality change in your traffic liability?
Mark Galardo
Savi, are you referring to Q4 2024 or Q4 2025?
Savi Syth
Q4 2024. Just the way – the line item moved in the balance sheet is quite different than it has in the past years.
It's kind of a forward sale of ticket line item.
John Di Bert
We can take a note and come back, yes. Maybe you can speak to Valerie.
I'm not sure I fully pick out question, we can…
Valerie Durand
I'll follow up with you, Savi.
Savi Syth
Sounds good. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Konark Gupta with Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Konark Gupta
Thanks, and good morning, everyone. I just want to follow-up just on the assumptions you guys have for 2025.
Obviously, clearly, the Canadian dollar had weakened and then it's kind of rebounding. So maybe it kind of matches your expectation or assumption.
But on the fuel side, I'm just curious, I think you talked about diversifying supply and I think you have your hedging fuel as well. So I just want to kind of pick a brain in terms of how should we think about the fuel price volatility this year, right?
Clearly, the fuel price in the market that we see is running higher than your assumption. So how do you find confidence in keeping that assumption?
John Di Bert
Yes. Spots running right around the mid-90s on fuel.
So I mean, ex-FX, right? So FX is its own element but on a U.S.
dollar basis. I mean, we're kind of hovering in the mid-90s.
So our expectation is that it's moved around the front end of the year was a little bit harder, so January to come in a bit heavy in terms of the fuel price, but it's settled in now. I think WPI is somewhere around $71, $72, that's kind of consistent with the way we see the year.
The forward curve would suggest that it's going to come down a little further. We really haven't reflected that on the long-term.
So our 95 volts for the year. So I think we're reflecting more or less the current environment.
And as I said, FX part and on the FX side, we'll watch this, it’s volatile. Right now, we have $140 expectations trading around $142 and change.
We’ll see how this all plays out, but we have some ability within the range as well to absorb some of that.
Konark Gupta
Okay. And just to be clear, John, there’s no active hedging in place for Q1?
John Di Bert
Yes. No, so I can’t comment on that.
So thank you. So, no, we hedged through the back end of last year.
We did so kind of middle of the year last year and we have nothing in place right now.
Konark Gupta
Okay. Perfect.
Thanks. And if I can follow up on CapEx.
So if I look at your total projected expenditure table, in the MD&A. It’s showing $3.5-ish billion CapEx for 2025 and then ramps up to $4.3 billion and $4.9 billion in the outer years.
If you can remind us, I think at the Investor Day, I think you were looking at some $3 billion of sale-leaseback transactions. So is this projected CapEx stable, not reflective of those sale leasebacks?
And how should we think about the actual net CapEx number?
John Di Bert
Yes. Yes, good question.
So a couple of things just as a kind of a high level point there. We had about $18 billion, as we mentioned, between inclusive of 2024 through 2018 CapEx, remains largely intact.
There’s a few pieces move around. We also have an FX impact in the current reporting period and FX close year a little bit high.
We use that current balance sheet rate to project all of the CapEx. So hopefully, in the long-term, that will be a little bit of tailwind as hopefully FX stabilize in the longer period.
So the numbers are kind of intact with the Investor Day, all of this kind of is bound into that plan that we talked about. The sales leasebacks are not put into the projected table when they’re contracted, then we may look at that differently.
But at this point in time, you have the gross CapEx. And so to your point, that will offer some flexibility, especially in the peak CapEx here as it intends and it will also bring back some balance to our fleet in terms of leased assets, which we like because it provides flexibility for us to manage through agile – with some agility through periods where there’s volatility.
Konark Gupta
Okay. Thanks for the answers.
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Lee with Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Matthew Lee
Hi. Thanks for taking my question.
Just in terms of capital priorities, I know you talked about taking out the convert in cash, but are there other ways you might consider returning capital to shareholders, whether that’s a dividend or an early renewal of the buyback.
John Di Bert
Yes. So I mean I’ll take both on here.
So the first thing is I think we’ve just completed a program, some $800 million deployed on share buybacks over that period. So I think it’s a great first step and very much aligned with what we had planned to do as we started off 2024.
We do have an opportunity here with the convertibles. So we’ll take advantage of that.
That’s another around CAD400 million that gets deployed. So it’s another substantial amount of give back to antidilutive actions.
I guess, in the kind of mid-term, so as we look through the back end of 2025 early to say now, but our plan was clear when we presented to you in December that we expect to continually look for opportunities to return capital to shareholders, and we will. So we’ll have an opportunity at the end of this year from a calendar point of view at the 12-month expiration of November of 2025 to look at another NCIB.
And at this point in time, that would be our base assumption or base plan. So there is another set of actions.
Beyond that and things like dividend and so on, nothing is ruled out, but I don’t think that that’s the plan for the mid-term. We’re going to do what we wanted to do on the share count make sure that we invest in the airlines, we can get the growth and the margin expansion that we were looking for.
And then obviously, when we’re generating consistent cash flow, we’ll have a lot of optionality.
Matthew Lee
That’s helpful. But there’s no way to do a buyback more quickly than the one-year mark in November this year.
John Di Bert
Yes, nothing practical. I mean, we don’t have a plan to do anything special like that at this point in time.
We’ll take advantage of what’s coming up here in the first half of the year, the convertible.
Matthew Lee
All right. Sounds good.
Thanks.
John Di Bert
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Jamie Baker with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Jamie Baker
Hey good morning, everybody. So just following up on some of John’s prepared remarks, been a couple of months since Investor Day.
And look, like everybody else on the call, I'm just trying to square how some of your full year assumptions may have changed internally. You addressed fuel.
There's the FX issue, tariffs. And look, the market is obviously well aware of all this.
My question is whether you can point to any specific offsetting improvements that have taken place that we might have missed maybe some even more incremental corporate demand resilience above and beyond what you spoke to Savi about just now, anything like that? Any specific positives in the last two months that you can make us aware of because it just it seems like the year is off to a rocky start.
John Di Bert
Yes. I wouldn't say it's off the rocky start, I'd say that, by and large, yes, a lot of – of course, a lot of drama.
And so all those things matter. But we in simple terms, I think we're seeing solid demand and solid yield, particularly into Q2 and early signals for Q3, and I think that those things are giving us a relative amount of confidence on holding our guidance for the year.
So that all things considered, I think – we feel relatively good about where we stand today, and we can't foresee the things that we won't speculate on tariffs and other things you all mentioned macroeconomically, but that's our view. I don't know, Mark, do you want to add anything here?
Mark Galardo
No, Jamie, just maybe the rebound on the Atlantic performance for Q2, Q3 might be a bit more favorable than we initially anticipated yield environment. It's pretty robust.
And of course, our focus on as much extreme traffic as possible.
Jamie Baker
Okay. Very helpful.
And then just quickly on the share count. I was a bit surprised that the year-end share count was not a little bit lower, could just be the group on my internal calculations.
But I don't know, was there any stock-based compensation that might have sort of figured into the final count and apologies in advance if I missed this in the notes? Thanks.
John Di Bert
No. I think maybe it's the weighted average that you're looking at and that would have had a very little effect, because you're looking at like 11 months that would have been pretty static and then you would have had one month.
So I look to the same thing. I think it's a weighted average impact that really bring it off.
That should be better, obviously, in 2025 as a lot of those shares are bought like $20 million versus the $50 million in the first quarter here. So that should get better quickly.
Jamie Baker
Okay. Perfect.
Thanks gentlemen.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Stephen Trent with Citi. Please go ahead.
Stephen Trent
Thank you for inviting and I appreciate you taking my questions. Just wanted to follow up a little bit on the jet fuel carries outlook.
I think if I heard you correctly in terms of your FX exposure you're hedging 70% of your FX exposure 18 months forward. So am I correct in thinking that this exposure is at least somewhat giving you some protection on your refueling expenses outside of Canada.
I wasn't sure if I'm chasing my tail on this one, but I just wanted to understand a bit more. Thank you.
John Di Bert
Yes. Thanks for the question, Stephen.
So just – I'll maybe take a minute just to give some – maybe some simple color on the hedging program. We look out 18 months.
We look for the net we have a net U.S. outflow, obviously.
So we do have some inflows, but obviously, fuel is U.S. dollar-denominated, a lot of maintenance as well.
And some station costs in the U.S. So we look at the net-net basis.
And for every penny, it's worth about a $4 billion outflow net. So it's about $40 million per penny of movement on FX.
The way to think about this is that the hedging program really is an economic hedge. The cost in Canadian dollars does on the cost line, particularly, for example, if you look at adjusted CASM will absorb and we'll have to reflect that weaker on dollars.
So we take some pain on the P&L on an adjusted basis because the gains on our derivatives will fall below the line. So they get adjusted out.
Now what I need you to understand that is most important is that the economic hedges, the cash flow hedges do protect cash flows as I settle into a market at $1.42 or $1.41 or $1.43 on hedges that are, call it $1.38 [ph] or something on average, we are going to get the cash flow benefit of that. And that does protect the free cash flow for the business in the short to medium term, of course, right.
It's an 18-month program. If you look through the next three months, we're probably 90% plus hedged.
As you go further out on the curve, it comes down and the overall is 70. So as you go out a year, 1.5 year, you're getting below that 70 average.
But the point here is that it protects the business, it protects cash flows, it allows us time to adjust, make decisions. But at the same time, you will see it in the earnings number, especially on the adjusted side.
And so just pay attention to that.
Stephen Trent
Appreciate that John, that's super helpful. And for my follow-up, just really quickly sort of when we think about the unit revenue environment for the first quarter, any high level view on what that looks like if you sort of normalize the year-on-year trend for the Easter calendar shift and for 29 days last February versus 28 this year.
Thank you.
Mark Galardo
Hi Stephen. This is Mark.
Just on the unit revenue side, I think you should expect a positive unit revenue Q1. But again the calendarization of Q1 this year versus last year makes the compare a little bit challenging.
But as we go into Q2, Q3, that's where I think you should expect a bit more opportunity.
Stephen Trent
Okay. Appreciate that.
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Chris Murray with ATB Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Chris Murray
Yes. Thanks, guys.
Good morning. Just maybe thinking about other parts of the operating revenue cargo and other.
So a couple of quick questions. One, we have seen a lot of movement around trade flows [ph] and tariffs.
Just any commentary you guys may have on how to think about the cargo business even near term or as we go into 2025? And then you did mention that you were pulling down some leisure capacity into like the U.S.
south destinations. Is that getting redeployed into other vacations destinations or should we be thinking that vacations may be slowing as we go through the year?
Mark Galardo
Hi Chris. Just firstly on the cargo side, as you know, 2024 was a better year for a non-COVID year.
And as we go into 2025 Q1, we see that continuing. The cargo market is so close in that it's tough to say exactly what Q2 and Q3 will look like.
But observing any potential shifts in trade or geography and right now at this time there's nothing to comment on. And on the capacity question, we do have a redeployment opportunity if required in some markets where we see a lot of demand interest right now and the booking curve is much more closer than we have seen the last couple years.
And there could be an opportunity for us in some domestic Canadian leisure markets as well to move some gauge around.
Chris Murray
Okay. I'll leave that one alone.
And then just maybe turning to operating expenses, I guess there's a couple pieces of this. One, we talked a little bit about – you are starting to see some improvement in some of the metrics, now that the pilot agreement is in place.
How are you finding some of the cost buckets moving around? And are you seeing the advantages you thought you would get that you kind of laid out at the Investor Day?
John Di Bert
Yes. I think we had some productivity already demonstrated in 2024 and I think we're going to continue to gain productivity as we grow some scale in the airline in the next couple of years.
I mean I think 2025 and we went through some of this in detail, but we're bringing a lot of narrow body and that's going to help our Sixth Freedom business as well as just bring back some capacity. But you get more cost effective scale when you bring in the larger aircraft.
So 321s and especially the 787s, that'll be more of a 2026, 2027 ramp. The technology continues to – we continue to progress well on deploying technology through the business and we're making investments that we feel very confident about with respect to giving our employees tools and capability to work more effectively.
So we feel good about our ability to generate both productivity and unit cost gains. We still have some inflationary impacts and 2025 is one of the years where we're going to kind of still have some pressure, particularly a couple of – we have the labor agreement to complete and we have the impacts of just a year-over-year on the pilot agreement that will kind of be fully effective this year.
Beyond that, maintenance has always been a bit of a tough environment and continues to be that right now. In the long term, as we get a modern fleet, we expect that to be alleviated a little bit as well.
So we're managing all parts of the business. And I think we remain focused on keeping costs in check.
And that will certainly be an important part of our margin expansion and 2025 is going to be a bit of compression, but feel good about 2026, 2027.
Chris Murray
Okay. We'll be there.
Thanks, folks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Didora with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Andrew Didora
Hey. Good morning everyone.
So I understand the current environment is fluid. But if we were to see you continue to cut more capacity, and maybe John, can you give us some guideposts on how we should think about a CASM impact from those cuts, say is one-point of capacity, one-point of CASM or is the relationship different?
Just curious on how to think about that.
John Di Bert
It's a bit of tough math to do on the phone with you right now. I probably have done it enough times, but I won't give you a translation here.
And now we're going to stay agile, and we also keep an eye on both, right? I mean we can manage both, and we have shown that last year is a good example of that.
We took some capacity out and we were very proactive in how we manage costs and we deliver on all of our expectations. And I'd say and then some.
So can't foresee all environments. So I'm not going to give you a blind guarantee across the board.
What I'm going to tell you is that we put $14.25 to $14.5 for sure, if you take out some ASMs, that's going to get a little bit of pressure. At the same time, we're going to stay very focused on pushing the agility in the business and making responsible decisions.
so that we can keep costs well managed. And we can talk about some kind of conversion maybe give some thoughts and talk offline on that.
Andrew Didora
Okay. Great.
I'll follow up offline on that one. And then just kind of a question just philosophically on the buyback.
I certainly know that the team's view on the valuation of the stock. But just curious if there was any management conversation about maybe not buying the max amount in any given day, just given how volatile the macro environment was to start the year.
Just curious on your thoughts there? Thank you.
John Di Bert
It's done right? So I am not going to speculate on – I mean, we did what we felt was the right thing to do.
And I think that in the long term, I feel that's going to have paid off being a smart decision, discipline matters and second guessing, I guess, is easy, but this is volatility that will work its way through the system. I think the bigger picture is that we feel very confident about the trading value for shareholders, and that includes deploying capital when it's available and making sure that we grow the revenue and the earnings and the rest will take care of itself.
Andrew Didora
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Cameron Doerksen with National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Cameron Doerksen
Yes. Thanks.
Good morning. Maybe to start just a clarification just around, I guess, your comments around pulling back some capacity on some of the U.S.
leader destinations in March. I'm just wondering if that is, I mean that is kind of in anticipation of weaker demand?
Or is that a reaction to anything you're seeing like in the very near term here as a result of people booking away from U.S. for whatever reason?
I'm just trying to understand if that's an anticipatory thing? Or is that something a reaction to what you're seeing in the market?
Mark Galardo
Hi Cameron, it's Mark. It is.
We are anticipating proactively that there could be a slowdown. We don't see it right now.
In our near-term bookings to the U.S., we don't see any major slowdown or anything substantial that would change our view of the market. That being said, if we can derisk this a little bit, and move – and be a bit proactive and move capacity into other sectors, we see strength.
I think that's the right now in this context.
Cameron Doerksen
Okay. No, that's great.
And maybe a second question, just on, I guess, aircraft availability? I know there's obviously been these engine related issues that have granted aircraft.
Just wondering in the last few months, if anything has improved or gotten worse on that front? Just your thoughts on what we should expect for the year on aircraft availability.
Michael Rousseau
Yes, I mean, particularly the A220 [ph] was the biggest challenge, I would say, with respect to aircraft availability. And we're working closely with Pratt and we speak very often, we track a plan together and we're, we believe we're going to see some improvement through the year and we expect the summer to be a better summer than it was last year for sure.
We've made a couple of investments as well on spare engines across the fleet where we thought we had some exposure just to try to improve the availability of aircraft. So we're trying to do some self-help as well.
But it's a combination of things. One, our maintenance organization just very, tracks us very tightly.
We do have senior level meetings with Pratt on a regular basis to make sure that all parts of that system are supporting us directly. And then we did deploy a little bit of capital to make sure that we help ourselves as well.
So, there's no promises, but I feel pretty good about how we're approaching it – 2025, I think should be better in the summer than it was.
Cameron Doerksen
Okay, that sounds good. Appreciate the time.
Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Tom Fitzgerald with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
Tom Fitzgerald
Hi everyone. Thanks for the time.
How would you characterize the domestic competitive capacity environment right now? Do you view it as mainly rational or are there any pockets of oversupply?
Mark Galardo
Hi, Tom. Interesting question.
In the near term, as we look into March and April, it is our view that the domestic market is over capacity. We see some of our competitors adding capacity levels that might be beyond what the market can absorb short term.
But as we go into later Q2 into Q3, right now it looks like a pretty balanced market and there could be an opportunity in that market, especially if we move some capacity from U.S. leisure destinations.
But in the near term, there's no real, I find the supply demand imbalance to be a little bit less optimal.
Tom Fitzgerald
Okay, thanks. That's a really helpful color.
And then did – I mean I apologies if I missed this on one of your earlier responses, but did you confirm if the if your CASM-ex guidance includes an assumption for a flight attendant deal?
Michael Rousseau
Yes, similar to what we did last year. Right.
We make an assumption and we've embedded that in our full year earnings guide as well as by default, the CASM guide. It's included as we did last year.
Tom Fitzgerald
Okay, thank you so much. That's really helpful.
Appreciate your time.
Michael Rousseau
Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your next question comes from the line of Greg Konrad with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Greg Konrad
Good morning. Maybe just to follow up, I mean you mentioned some of the capacity redeployment with a potential redeployment to the Canadian leisure market.
Can you maybe just talk a little bit more about what you're seeing competitively and some of the opportunities in the Canadian market?
Mark Galardo
Sure. So in the short term, as I just answered the question, I think in the domestic Canadian market for late Q1, early Q2, we see substantial market capacity increase, which is maybe above what the market can absorb short term.
But as we go into later Q2 and early Q3, the supply demand balance seems to be a bit more optimal. And we think there's an opportunity in some Canadian leisure markets to move a little bit of capacity.
And as well, the sun market looks very strong all the way through the booking curve and it could be an opportunity as well for us to move a little bit capacity there. Again, these are tweaks to our potential offset of the U.S.
leisure situation.
Greg Konrad
And then maybe just given all the pieces you kind of talked about corporate and some of the different pieces, I know you had pretty good premium growth in 2024. Just given some of the moving pieces?
I mean how are you thinking about premium in 2025 and maybe how that's embedded in the numbers?
Mark Galardo
No, we think it continues to be strong. I think we have a good opportunity to further capitalize on that.
And as well, not only with the premium segment, but as well with some of our branded fair initiatives to drive and manufacture some revenue here. So that combination I think gives us some tailwinds.
Greg Konrad
Thank you.
Operator
And that concludes our question-and-answer session. I will now turn the conference back over to Valerie for closing comments.
Valerie Durand
Thank you, Krista. Thank you once again for joining us on our call this morning.
Should you have any follow up questions, please don't hesitate to contact us at Investor Relations. [Foreign Language] Thank you and have a great day.
[Foreign Language]
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's conference call. Thank you for your participation and you may now disconnect.