Stocks/RJET

RJET

Republic Airways Holdings Inc.
Industrials·Airlines, Airports & Air Services
$20.35
$953M market cap
Claude Rating
4/10UNDERWEIGHT
Revenue
$1.1B
Free Cash Flow
$-45.0M
Rev Growth
+302.7%
FCF Margin
-4.3%
P/FCF
--
EV/FCF
--
Fwd EV/EBITDA
6.2x
Fair Value
$12.00
Upside
-41.0%

Republic Airways Holdings Inc. provides scheduled passenger services. It operates a fleet of approximately 240 aircraft and offers scheduled passenger service with 1,000 daily flights to 80 cities across the U.S., Canada, the Caribbean, and Central America. The company was founded in 1974 and is based in Indianapolis, Indiana.

2-Year Price History

$21.95+5.3%
$17$18$19$20$21$22volNov 25Dec 25Jan 26Feb 26Mar 26Apr 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q1525.073.5--15.8--10.5-44.6439.3----------
Est2027-Q4530.076.9--18.6--13.3-42.4428.8----------
Est2027-Q3560.092.4--33.6--28.0-39.2415.6----------
Est2027-Q2545.084.5--27.3--19.1-40.9387.6----------
Est2027-Q1510.066.3--12.8--5.1-40.8368.5----------
Est2026-Q4520.070.2--15.6--7.8-44.2363.4----------
Est2026-Q3555.086.0--30.5--22.2-41.6355.6----------
Est2026-Q2540.075.6--24.3--13.5-43.2333.4----------
Act2025-Q4464.167.234.15.0356.6-35.3-391.9319.91,22542.63.4%4.3x--
Act2025-Q390.7-6.5-1.9-14.1-0.7-1.4-0.741.8103.12.8-7.2%-2.3x--
Act2025-Q1394.8-51.252.927.153.85.3-48.5273.5298.250.912.0%-3.6x--
Act2024-Q4103.2-101.21.6-111.9-11.6-13.6-2.1302.0248.52.82.5%-14.3x--
Act2024-Q3115.3-9.76.3-24.914.711.2-3.418.6318.82.87.4%-1.3x--
Act2024-Q2110.8-2.0-1.2-19.911.27.5-3.724.7369.12.8-0.8%-0.2x--
Act2024-Q1348.1374.5130.310.114.7-14.9-29.621.5403.150.9121.7%24.6x--
Act2023-Q4118.8-32.5-10.6-57.9-7.8-14.7-6.9342.2577.62.7-7.4%-2.9x--
Act2023-Q3114.4-4.4-16.7-28.3-10.3-15.3-5.036.1539.92.7-10.2%-0.3x--
Act2023-Q2114.7-23.0-16.5-47.6-5.2-12.3-7.151.5579.62.7-9.4%-1.9x--
Act2023-Q1121.8-7.7-10.1-35.1-2.6-10.4-7.854.6622.72.7-5.2%-0.6x--
Act2022-Q4147.216.56.2-9.1-6.0-22.8-16.761.0633.72.43.8%1.5x--
Act2022-Q3125.6-118.5-8.6-115.6-0.2-7.8-7.661.0633.72.4-3.5%-11.3x--
Act2022-Q2134.416.30.2-10.03.6-6.8-10.457.8673.52.40.1%1.9x--
Act2022-Q1123.2-26.3-5.3-42.85.22.1-3.179.3679.72.4-1.7%-3.2x--
Historical Valuation

Multiples vs the company's own history — cheap or rich relative to itself? Historical fiscal years, then TTM, then forward projections (E). Forward rows hold today's price against projected earnings, so the multiple compresses if the company grows into it.

YearPriceRev GrEBITDA %EBITDAEV/EBITDAEV/FCFP/EP/S
2022-21.1%-112
2023-11.4%-14.4%-68
2024+44.2%38.6%262
TTM20.35+51.9%-8.7%-920.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×
2027E20.35+103.7%0.1%30.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×

EBITDA in reporting-currency $M. Historical multiples use year-end market cap (split-adjusted price history); TTM & forward years use today's.

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude4/10UNDERWEIGHTFV: $12.00

Republic Airways is a leveraged, operationally challenged regional airline in the midst of a complex multi-year merger integration with Mesa. While revenue has scaled impressively to a $2B+ run rate and management has a credible integration roadmap, the investment case is undermined by: (1) $1.2B in debt/lease liabilities at 2.7x leverage vs. SkyWest's 1.6x, (2) structurally thin FCF margins typical of regional carriers with no pricing power, (3) severe pilot retention issues evidenced by lawsuits against LIFT Academy students, (4) regulatory headwinds including FAA rejection of reduced training hours and O'Hare flight caps, (5) a federal probe into the former CEO creating governance overhang, and (6) 80.8% short interest signaling deep institutional skepticism. The massive 1,446% annual dilution from the Mesa merger share issuance has destroyed per-share economics. Even if integration succeeds perfectly, this is a capital-intensive, labor-constrained business earning low single-digit FCF margins with limited competitive moat versus SkyWest.

Catalyst Successful integration synergies materializing ahead of schedule, deleveraging to sub-2x, or a short squeeze given 80.8% short interest could drive near-term upside. Partner contract renewals at higher rates could also help.
Risk Pilot retention failure and wage inflation could compress already thin fixed-fee margins, while $1.2B in debt obligations leave minimal room for operational missteps during a multi-year integration with execution risk.
Trend
IMPROVING
Mgmt
5/10
Quarter
6/10
Exp. Move
-5.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Republic Airways delivered a strong Q1 2026 performance, its first since the Mesa merger. The company reported $527.4 million in revenue and $0.73 adjusted EPS. A leadership transition was announced, with Matt Koscal succeeding David Grizzle as CEO in June. Despite severe winter weather reducing the completion factor to 94%, the airline achieved 80 days of perfect controllable completion. The integration of Mesa is progressing ahead of schedule in back-office areas, with full fleet and certificate harmonization expected by 2027 and 2028, respectively. Republic completed a major fleet refresh for United Airlines, swapping 38 E170s for new E175s. Financial health is a priority, with net leverage at 2.7x and a year-end goal of 2.2x. To optimize capital allocation, Republic deferred its next Embraer deliveries to 2028. Full-year guidance was reaffirmed, with revenue expected to exceed $2 billion and EBITDAR over $380 million. Management highlighted strong demand for regional capacity and normalized pilot attrition. With 70% of its fleet currently unencumbered, the company possesses significant financial flexibility to navigate macro uncertainties and support its major airline partners.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$20.35
Market Cap$953M
Enterprise Value$1.9B
P/S Ratio0.9x
P/FCF--
EV/FCF--
FCF Margin (TTM)-4.3%
FCF Yield-4.7%
Dividend Yield (TTM)2.6%
Annual Dilution1446.0%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$1.1B
Net Income$-94.0M
Free Cash Flow$-45.0M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+302.7%
EBITDA Margin-8.7%
Net Margin-8.9%
FCF Margin-4.3%
CapEx % of Revenue42.1%
SBC % of Revenue0.0%
ROIC2.7%
WC Change % Rev-7.7%
Interest Coverage-2.3x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$1.11
-94.6% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$472M
− Net Debt$905M
= Fair Equity$47M
Revenue Growth1.6% → 2.0%
FCF Margin-4.3% → 5.0%
Discount Rate16.0%
Terminal EV/FCF7.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float87.9%
Short Shares0.6M
Days to Cover4.6
Change (vs Prior)+8.8%
Short % Float History
87.90%+84.40pp
0.0%20.0%40.0%60.0%80.0%11-2812-1512-3101-1501-3003-3104-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)--
Put IV (ATM)--
ATM Spread--
Call $OI (near money)$0
Put $OI (near money)$0
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$7.5
Major Expirations1
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$2.50--/$0.500$0.75/$1.250
$5.00--/$0.500$3.10/$3.900
$7.50--/$0.500--/--0
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+101.8%
Forward FCF Margin2.3%
Forward EBITDA Margin14.0%
Forward P/FCF19.6x
Forward EV/FCF38.2x
Forward Int. Coverage4.5x
Model Risk Score8/10
Bankruptcy Odds12%
Est. Borrow Rate9.5%
Terminal EV/FCF7.0x
LT Growth2.0%
LT FCF Margin5.0%

Employees

Headcount6,400
Revenue / Employee$164,501
Gross Profit / Employee$40,383
2022: 2,454 → 2023: 2,303 → 2024: 1,838 → 2025: 8,400 (51% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 676.0% of float, sold 138.7%. 2 filers moved >1% of shares (1 buying, 1 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+537.3% of float (net)
Bought 676.0% · Sold 138.7%
45 filers reported (last quarter: 38)

Ownership composition

Active
63.4%(+2.5% YoY)
36 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
1.8%(+1.6% YoY)
7 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.6%(+0.6% YoY)
3 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
2.9%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2025-122026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
United Airlines Holdings, Inc.$188M$18.24+$49.1M+$188M-30.2%$211M
American Airlines Group Inc.$174M$18.37+$0+$174M$174M
DELTA AIR LINES, INC.$121M$18.37+$0+$121M-0.2%$378M
Owl Creek Asset Management, L.P.$75.7M$18.36+$2.1M+$75.7M+0.1%$518M
CONTRARIAN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, L.L.C.$71.5M$18.37+$0+$71.5M-3.0%$357M
PAR CAPITAL MANAGEMENT INC$9.1M$18.05+$5.9M+$9.1M-0.7%$3.44B
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$6.9M$17.92+$6.3M+$6.9M-0.2%$5.69T
SUSQUEHANNA INTERNATIONAL GROUP, LLPMM$5.7M$17.88+$5.7M+$5.7M-0.6%$77.14B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$4.3M$17.93+$3.8M+$4.3M+2.3%$1.61T
VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$4.0M$17.88+$4.0M+$4.0M$4.04T
Orvieto Partners, L.P.$2.1M$18.21+$670K+$2.1M-3.2%$117M
Pinnacle Holdings, LLC$2.0M$18.36+$46K+$2.0M-0.2%$288M
VANGUARD FIDUCIARY TRUST COPassive$1.9M$17.88+$1.9M+$1.9M$395.83B
CastleKnight Management LP$1.9M$17.97+$1.6M+$1.9M+1.2%$2.13B
DONALD SMITH & CO., INC.$1.6M$17.88+$1.6M+$1.6M+3.2%$5.56B
Qube Research & Technologies Ltd$1.3M$17.99+$1.0M+$1.3M+0.3%$70.36B
WEXFORD CAPITAL LP$1.2M$18.37−$8.8M+$1.2M+0.5%$607M
NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive$777K$17.88+$777K+$777K-0.2%$755.34B
BANK OF AMERICA CORP /DE/$666K$17.88+$666K+$666K-0.1%$1.36T
MILLENNIUM MANAGEMENT LLC$654K$18.17+$269K+$654K-0.5%$127.40B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BEARISH
Holders
-0.91%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-12.33%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-3.39%
35 buyers · $0.08B in
Sellers (this Q)
+0.47%
5 sellers · $0.01B out
alpha coverage: 99% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior (holder profile)source: holder
On big dips (−10%+)
+0.4%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
+5.5%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-7.6%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+3.4%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+44.0%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

09.1M18.2M27.4M36.5M$18$18$18$18$182025-122026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
United Airlines Holdings, Inc.10.5MAmerican Airlines Group Inc.9.8MDELTA AIR LINES, INC.6.8MCONTRARIAN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, L.L.C.4.4MOwl Creek Asset Management, L.P.4.2MWEXFORD CAPITAL LP66KPAR CAPITAL MANAGEMENT INC507KFortress Investment Group LLCOrvieto Partners, L.P.117KPinnacle Holdings, LLC113K

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Price Targets
Last Year (1 analysts)$718.00342830.0%
Current Price$20.35
Consensus Estimates
QuarterRevenueEBITDANet IncEPSEPS Range# Analysts
2027 Q3124M21M-156M$-3.38$-3.38 – $-3.381
2027 Q4124M21M-199M$-4.31$-4.31 – $-4.311
2028 Q1124M21M-315M$-6.83$-6.83 – $-6.831
2028 Q2138M23M-201M$-4.35$-4.35 – $-4.351
2028 Q3128M21M-225M$-4.88$-4.88 – $-4.881
2028 Q4114M19M-104M$-2.25$-2.25 – $-2.251
2029 Q1126M21M-62M$-1.35$-1.35 – $-1.351
2029 Q2135M23M105M$2.28$2.28 – $2.281
2029 Q3147M25M152M$3.29$3.29 – $3.291
2029 Q4154M26M116M$2.52$2.52 – $2.521

Corporate

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$1.68M
5 txns · 2 insiders · 2,591 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2025-12-09SELLNewstead Jenniferofficer: Chief Legal Officer519$664.16$345K$20.07M
2025-12-08SELLOlivan Javierofficer: Chief Operating Officer517$669.63$346K$9.21M
2025-12-02SELLNewstead Jenniferofficer: Chief Legal Officer519$642.22$333K$19.74M
2025-12-01SELLOlivan Javierofficer: Chief Operating Officer517$639.03$330K$9.12M
2025-11-25SELLNewstead Jenniferofficer: Chief Legal Officer519$624.14$324K$19.51M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

10.7%retail-2.5pp
36.5%dark+4.2pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%20%30%40%50%60%70%25-1225-1226-0126-0226-0326-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

Republic Airways (RJET) shares fell over 7.6% in late April 2026 following Q1 earnings that revealed significant operational fragility. While revenue grew 34% due to the Mesa Air Group merger, the company was rocked by a federal probe into former CEO and current FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford for allegedly violating ethics agreements regarding a $25 million RJET stock sale (Benzinga, April 2026). Operationally, Q1 results were marred by Winter Storms Fern and Hernando, which grounded 87% of the fleet on peak days and dropped the completion factor to a dismal 93.87% (Seeking Alpha, April 2026).

🐻 Bear Case

The bear case centers on structural labor deficits and financial underperformance relative to peers. Unlike rival SkyWest, which maintains a net cash position, RJET is burdened by $1.2 billion in debt and lease liabilities with a 2.7x leverage ratio (GuruFocus, April 2026). The airline's growth is stalled as it recently pushed back its next Embraer deliveries from 2027 to 2028. Furthermore, the 2026 pilot shortage has peaked at a 24,000-pilot shortfall, leaving RJET vulnerable to 'poaching' by mainline partners and escalating wage inflation that threatens fixed-fee margins.

🚩 Red Flags

Management is currently suing its own flight students at the LIFT Academy for breaking employment contracts, a desperate signal of severe pilot attrition and retention failure (The Indiana Lawyer, 2026). A major regulatory blow occurred when the FAA rejected Republic's petition to halve pilot training requirements to 750 hours, citing safety concerns—a move RJET management admitted was critical to their staffing model. Additionally, new FAA flight caps at Chicago O'Hare (2,700 daily flights) starting June 2026 pose a direct threat to Republic’s Midwest hub operations.

⚔️ Competitive Threats

SkyWest (SKYW) remains the primary threat, operating with a significantly more robust balance sheet (1.64x leverage) and a more diversified multi-partner model. SkyWest's expansion into Part 135 charter operations and higher reliability metrics (99%+ completion) makes it the preferred partner for mainline carriers over the operationally inconsistent Republic. RJET also faces 'insourcing' risks where mainline partners (AA, DL, UA) may reclaim regional routes to optimize their own pilot utilization during periods of high labor costs.

💬 Customer Sentiment

Sentiment is increasingly toxic as Republic-operated flights (under United Express and Delta Connection) were listed among the most disrupted in the U.S. during the 2026 spring travel rush. Passengers at major hubs like Boston Logan and Chicago O'Hare reported 'rolling cancellations' and 'last-minute crew swaps,' with travel analysts noting that regional carriers like Republic are 'the first to be sacrificed' during air traffic control or weather disruptions to protect mainline schedules (The Traveler, April 2026).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-04-29

Operator: Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us, and welcome to RJET Q1 2026 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] I will now hand the conference over to Keely Mitchell. Please go ahead.
Keely Mitchell: Thank you, Cara, and thank you, everyone, for joining our earnings call. On with me today are David Grizzle, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Matt Koscal, President and Chief Commercial Officer; and Joe Allman, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. In the Investor Relations section of our website, you will find the earnings press release and slide presentation to accompany today's discussion. This call is being recorded and will be available for replay on our Investor Relations website. Today's discussion will include forward-looking statements regarding Republic Airways future performance, strategic initiatives, and market outlook. These statements reflect our current expectations and beliefs based on information available to us today, but they are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our projections. The aviation industry operates in a dynamic environment with inherent risks, including regulatory changes, economic fluctuations, weather-related disruptions, and evolving market conditions that can significantly impact our operations and financial performance. Additionally, our business is subject to the operational and financial health of our major airline partners, labor market conditions, aircraft availability, and other factors beyond Republic's direct control. For a comprehensive understanding of the specific risks and uncertainties that may affect our business and financial results, I encourage all participants to review the detailed disclosures in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our Form 10-K on file with the SEC. These documents provide important context and detailed information that supplement today's discussion and are or will be available on both the SEC's website and in the Investor Relations section of Republic's website at rjet.com. Throughout this webcast, we will also present and discuss non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures, to the extent available and without unreasonable effort, appear in today's earnings press release and accompanying presentation, which are available on our Investor Relations website. And now I will turn the call over to David.
David Grizzle: Thank you, Keely, and good evening. Before we get into our prepared remarks, I'd like to update everyone on the anticipated leadership changes. The Board promoted Matt to the position of CEO effective June 15. Additionally, effective at the same time, the Board promoted both Joe Allman, our CFO; and Paul Kinstedt, our Chief Operating Officer, to the position of Executive Vice President, and I will continue in my role as Chairman. This completes our succession plan for Republic following its merger with Mesa and return to the public markets. We are blessed to have such a seasoned leadership team. I've had a chance to work very closely with these talented executives during the last year. I have tremendous respect for them and Republic is well positioned for the future. Our people and our culture are the backbone of our success, and we have an outstanding team. The first quarter of 2026 marked a couple of significant milestones for our company. First, this is our first fiscal quarterly reporting period following the merger with Mesa last November. And as a reminder, our quarterly results from Q1 2025 do not include any Mesa results. We reported Q1 2026 adjusted net income per diluted share of $0.73. Revenues were $527 million, and adjusted pretax income was $47 million, or an 8.9% pretax margin. These strong financial results demonstrate the resiliency of our business model to weather the storm. The first quarter is generally our lowest quarter of block hour production due to seasonality. This year, our operations were impacted by severe winter weather in January and February. Winter Storms Fern and Hernando had a direct impact on our operations in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions. As an example, during 1 day of Fern, we were unable to operate 87% of the airline because of weather, which in turn created large crew positioning disruptions. I want to thank our frontline crew members and operations center associates that worked tirelessly through these multi-day disruptions and still delivered an exceptional product to all of our passengers and partners. While our full-up completion factor was 3 points lower, or 94%, versus the prior year Q1 result of 97%, our controllable completion rate remained exceptional, and we were still able to achieve 80 days, a perfect -- that is to say, 100% controllable completion factor performance in the quarter. I am continually impressed by the professionalism and dedication of our team as they serve our partners and passengers. The second significant milestone is the conclusion of our fleet transition efforts at United. We took delivery of the last 3 new E175 aircraft to conclude our fleet transition by swapping 38 new E175s for the 38 E170s at United. We started this fleet transition program back in November 2022, and we now have all of the new aircraft in position and in service with United. 31 of the 38 E170s removed from service have been redeployed to another partner, either in revenue service or under long-term leases. The last 7 E170s removed from United are currently unallocated, meaning not assigned to any of our partners, and will be used for ad hoc charters and other support. As a reminder, substantially all our revenues are generated from capacity purchase agreements with our 3 airline partners, American, Delta, and United. Our business model also protects us from fuel price increases as our partners are responsible for fuel, ground handling, and managing the passenger ticket pricing and demand management. We are responsible for providing safe, reliable, and cost-efficient operations. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Matt to provide an update on our strategic focus and the ongoing integration efforts related to the merger. Matt?
Matthew Koscal: Thank you, David, and good evening, everyone. I want to begin by expressing how deeply humbled and grateful I am for the opportunity to lead our more than 8,400 dedicated Republic associates. It is a tremendous privilege to serve alongside such an exceptional team that shares a steadfast commitment to our culture of excellence, a culture that has defined who we are and enabled our continued success. As we look ahead to our next chapter of growth, I am fully committed to building upon this strong foundation and further strengthening it together. I would also like to sincerely thank our Board of Directors and David for their trust and confidence in me and our executive leadership team as we carry Republic forward. Turning our direction to the demand environment. Despite the uncertainty that persists in the broader market and its effects on oil prices and ultimately jet fuel costs, the demand signals from our partners are cautiously optimistic and focused on smart capacity deployments. As such, the demand for large multi-class regional aircraft remains strong, particularly in the high-value hubs we service, and we don't expect that to change. Historically, our aircraft have actually seen increases in utilization even during uncertain economic conditions. Our aircraft provide our partners the flexibility to deploy a lower seat density aircraft to right-size or match expected passenger demand and still capture business, premium, and basic economy fares. Earlier this month, an FAA order capped daily flights at Chicago O'Hare at 2,700 beginning in June. This presented another example of our agility and how we work closely with our partners. While we expect to see some adjustments to our O'Hare schedule in June, we don't expect any material long-term impacts to our flying, as many of those hours will be redeployed in other areas of our partners' networks. We remain in constant communication with our partners to ensure we are ready to shift flying where they desire and protect the expected block hour production and schedules. Before I move to discuss the status of the integration, I think it's important to acknowledge that while the Northeast bore the brunt of winter weather this year, it was helpful for us to have some new geographic diversity in our network. The addition of Houston to our network as a result of the Mesa merger helped offset some of the lost flying days we had in the Northeast, and we look forward to expanding positively on this trend as we increase utilization at Mesa over the next couple of years. Now let me turn my attention to our integration efforts. We've made substantial progress during the quarter on integration. We remain focused on executing our 4 clear workstreams: consolidation of the back-office functions, IT systems integration, fleet harmonization, and regulatory operating certificate harmonization. Regarding the first 2 workstreams -- consolidation of corporate functions and the integration of our IT systems -- we have made great progress on both fronts in the quarter. We are slightly ahead of plan on the back-office integration, and we expect that work to be substantially complete by Q4 of this year. On the IT front, we continue to make investments across legacy Mesa to further enhance both hardware and software capabilities, and we believe these investments are already providing tangible benefits across the airline. This workstream is a multiyear process that doesn't fully wrap up until we complete the operating certificate harmonization process in 2028. Lastly, we were pleased to receive approval from the FAA to recognize our Carmel training campus as an approved Mesa training facility. This puts us 1 step closer to being able to train all of our crews at our state-of-the-art training campus in Carmel, Indiana. On the fleet side, we are in the early stages of moving the Mesa fleet onto our standard maintenance cycle with full harmonization of our E175 programs. Completion of this process will allow us to drive maximum utilization, compliance consistency, and improved maintenance and inventory management across the combined fleet. In Q1, we achieved our first milestone on reduced heavy maintenance turnaround times, which is an early example of how legacy Republic can leverage planning and supply chain resources to unlock future value across the Mesa operation. This early improvement gives us increased confidence that we will achieve our target of completing the fleet harmonization work in late 2027. The fourth workstream, the process of bringing 2 operations into a single harmonized airline with the FAA, coupled with associated technology and systems alignment, is expected to continue into 2028. The process will involve the filing and approval by the FAA of 5 revision cycles. The first revision cycle addresses the alignment of our safety systems and processes, and we anticipate submission of this in early May. The overall goal of the harmonization process is to create a unified airline from an FAA perspective, with aligned manuals, maintenance programs, training, and operational oversight. Lastly, let me speak to our progress with our labor unions. In December, we reached a joint collective bargaining agreement or JCBA, with the 2 flight attendant labor unions, and the teams have spent considerable time on preparing for implementation of the JCBA throughout the first quarter. I want to acknowledge all the work and support that both the IBT and AFA provided to deliver an agreement. We appreciate the focus and energy those teams demonstrated in achieving the joint collective bargaining agreement. With respect to the pilots of IBT at Republic and ELPA at Mesa, we continue to have productive dialog and negotiations. I would like to thank everyone for their continued hard work in this area, and we look forward to providing you updates on our progress in the future. On the staffing side of the house, we entered this year with slightly elevated staffing levels to ensure that we could deliver an excellent operation to our partners while we work through Mesa's integration. We are well positioned to meet the needs of our partners, both now and in the future, and we are reaffirming our block hour guidance that we will produce more than 865,000 block hours this year. 2026 continues to be a transformational year. Our investments in training infrastructure, technology, and our future aircraft delivery positions with Embraer put us in a position to serve our partners' needs well into the future. To recap, we are on track with our integration targets and remain focused on continuing to deliver an exceptional operation for all of our partners. Once the aircraft maintenance harmonization process concludes, we expect to see an improvement in aircraft availability for schedule as heavy maintenance normalizes. We remain committed to successful execution of these initiatives and look forward to sharing updates with you as we progress throughout the year. We believe the end state will support greater operational efficiency, which will drive stronger margins and shareholder returns. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Joe to walk us through Q1 financial results. Joe?
Joe Allman: Thanks, Matt, and good evening, everyone. Total revenue for the quarter was up 34% to $527.4 million due to a 30% increase in block hour production. This was our first full quarter of Mesa's operations. We incurred $9.5 million of merger and integration related costs during the quarter. These are the costs associated with the integration and harmonization efforts that Matt just covered. We will continue to separately report these costs, and as the integration and harmonization activities begin to subside, we also expect the associated costs to subside. Our adjusted pretax income was $47.1 million, up 15% over Q1 2025. And adjusted EBITDAR for the quarter was $100.1 million, up 14% over the prior year period. The improved Q1 2026 financial performance is attributable to the growth in operations from the Mesa transaction, as well as the growth of Republic's fleet following the fleet transition David highlighted earlier. Focusing on cash flows and our balance sheet, we generated $58 million in cash from operations this quarter. Our cash outlay from investments in aircraft, property and equipment, including predelivery deposits, increased to $95 million, driven by the acquisition of the 3 E175 aircraft. We received proceeds from new debt of $64 million and made scheduled principal repayments of $49 million during the quarter. Our adjusted net leverage was flat from year-end 2025 at 2.7x. We expect our net leverage to continue to improve over the balance of 2026 as we remain focused on our initiatives to reduce net leverage below 2.2x by year-end 2026 and with a longer-term target of below 1.5x. We believe it is prudent to continue to strengthen our balance sheet and reduce debt as this will best position our airline for the future. We recently reached an agreement with Embraer to reschedule our aircraft delivery positions. Originally, our next delivery was expected in February of 2027. With the adjustments from Embraer, we now expect our first delivery in April of 2028. This revised delivery skyline timing allows us the opportunity to match deliveries to expected demand from our airline partners. We appreciate the longstanding partnership and relationship with the team at Embraer. Turning our focus to guidance. We issued full year 2026 guidance 8 weeks ago on March 4. At that time, the conflict in the Middle East was 3 or 4 days old. Since that time, we have seen an escalation of hostility and more volatility and uncertainty. Meanwhile, our discussions with our airline partners have been very positive and indicate a strong demand for our products. Therefore, we are reaffirming the guidance we previously issued. We expect revenues in excess of $2 billion and adjusted EBITDAR in excess of $380 million on block hour production of at least 865,000 hours. Capex is anticipated to be $170 million, which is mainly driven by aircraft and engine CapEx, the completion of our campus and training center construction projects, and other general maintenance CapEx. We expect to repay $165 million of principal and receive proceeds of new debt of approximately $75 million. Despite the uncertainties that exist in the broader market, we remain confident in our ability to achieve these targets. Lastly, we are focused on ensuring an efficient integration and harmonization of the Mesa operation and continuing to deliver on our brand promise of industry-leading operational performance and outstanding customer service to our airline partners and their passengers we carry. We are well positioned for the future, and now I'll turn the call over to David.
David Grizzle: Thank you, Joe. I'm very proud of the whole Republic team as they've been able to maintain our impeccable operating performance and deliver strong financial performance despite the challenges that come with winter weather. In addition to improving weather, which will allow us to fulfill our flight segments as scheduled, the demand signals from our partners for the remainder of the year remain quite strong. We believe that the headwinds faced this quarter will continue to subside and the company will be in a position to achieve positive momentum and significant growth throughout the rest of 2026. We appreciate the support of our associates, our partners, and our shareholders, and we look forward to continuing to deliver our commitments and promises to all our stakeholders. Thank you again for joining us today and for your interest in Republic. Cara, we are ready to open the line for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Savi Syth with Raymond James.
Savanthi Syth: I know it wasn't controllable factors, but I was curious with these severe weather impacts that you've had this quarter. Was there a notable impact on earnings that maybe is not normal that we should consider as we think about the earnings power here?
Matthew Koscal: Savi, it's Matt. Thanks for the question. Thanks for joining the call. You're spot on. The impact was significant over what we saw last year, about 3 -- a little over 3 full points. That's not typical for us in a quarter. We didn't break out the impact. But in a more typical seasonal environment, we would expect the business to perform more robustly.
Savanthi Syth: Understood. And maybe on the -- United has shown some creative thinking with the CRJ-550 a few years back and now the CRJ-450. Just wondering if there's an opportunity to do something like that with the E170s or even the E145s that you've operated in the past.
Matthew Koscal: Great question. So as you look at it, I think we have a history of being a solution provider for our partners, right? And that has evolved throughout the years. We are positioned incredibly well. We're sitting here today with a strong plan for 2026 going into 2027. It's fully focused on a successful and flawless Mesa integration. Today, as you heard on our prepared remarks, the team is just performing exceptionally well in that regard. We're ahead of schedule on each of our workstreams, and we could not be more proud of their efforts there. As we continue to deliver on that and we strengthen our balance sheet, we believe that positions us incredibly well to continue to have flexibility to respond to our partners' needs, and we'll continue to have those conversations with them and be ready to respond to their needs as they evolve.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Duane Pfennigwerth with Evercore ISI.
Duane Pfennigwerth: Just wondering longer term, I appreciate the commentary on the deferrals, but how are you thinking about putting the order book to work? And would you think about those in terms of growth? Or do you expect them to be primarily for fleet replacement by your customers?
Matthew Koscal: Duane, thanks for the question. And if you look at our past deployment, I think it's been a combination of both, right? We've found opportunities to deploy certain aircraft in a purely growth positioning. And then we've also found ways to do fleet replacements and then redeployment of other aircraft to other partners, just as we've done in this completion of the E175 order at United. The beauty of the order book that we've had as we've had it for several years now is we've got ultimate flexibility. We've got a great relationship with Embraer, and we continue to be in dialog with our partners to find the best deployment of those assets as opposed to just a deployment in the original order slots. And that's what we think that this deferral allows us to do, is it allows us to find that ultimate best solution with our codeshare partners on a future deployment for them.
Duane Pfennigwerth: And then just for my follow-up, the presentation is very clear with the expected debt paydown over the balance of the year. But I wonder, as you look out longer term, do you see opportunities to refinance a portion of that debt as well, now that you have probably a different and improved credit profile?
Joe Allman: Duane, this is Joe speaking. It's a great question. Look, our focus right now is on just continuing to strengthen the balance sheet. We have a lot of unencumbered assets, though, as you referenced -- as we referenced in the presentation. 70% of the fleet today is free of financing. Now some of those aircraft come from our partners, but we have a number of E175s and E170s that are debt-free at this stage. So we believe that flexibility as we move forward will put us in the best position to find unique and strategic ways to work with our airline partners and find the solutions that Matt referenced in his response just a second ago.
Operator: Your next call comes from the line of Michael Linenberg with Deutsche Bank.
Michael Linenberg: Congrats, Matt, on your promotion. Question here just on the guidance for the year. When you look at what you have for block hours and what you have for EBITDAR, I mean, it looks like despite all the intensity and complexity of the March quarter with the weather, it looks like that you're actually running well ahead of plan. And so the question is, are you ahead of plan? Do you feel like you're ahead of track? Are there things that we need to consider in this year where maybe you take a temporary hit to block hours or maybe there's some seasonality piece, even though I know historically you don't see as much seasonality with the regional carriers? Something for us that maybe I'm not looking at because it does seem like you're well ahead given what was a challenging quarter for everybody.
Matthew Koscal: Michael, this is Matt. Thank you very much. Appreciate the congratulations. And it is a great observation, a great question. And look, in any other environment that we're sitting here talking to you today after the quarter that we put together and what we're seeing in our block hour demand going into Q2, Q3, we would be taking up our guidance. Considering the macro uncertainty today, we just think it's prudent to get a little bit further into the year and see how things develop and go from there. But we had an incredibly strong quarter, you're right, a lot of challenges, and we'll provide you updates as we get further into the year.
Michael Linenberg: And then just my second question, as we think about the improvement in your leverage, it does look like that the CapEx should come down because of the deferrals or the next airplane coming in the spring of 2028. I realize you're still on the hook for predelivery deposits. How can we think about CapEx, though, as it trends where we are today over the next, I don't know, 3 to 4 quarters? It does seem like it's going to slope down, and maybe it actually hits a bottom sometime in early '27 before starting to pick back up again.
Joe Allman: Thanks, Mike. This is Joe speaking. You're correct. We should see CapEx subside as we move throughout the year. The first quarter was our heaviest quarter, predominantly related to the aircraft deliveries. We'll come up on the conclusion of the construction in our Carmel training campus. And just general maintenance CapEx -- and I should say the CapEx associated with the investment that we're making at Mesa. And those opportunities will come and continue to present themselves as we progress throughout the year. But you're right, it's a downward slope from the first quarter.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Savi Syth with Raymond James.
Savanthi Syth: I was curious, I think a couple of months ago, when you talked, you were expecting normal levels of attrition versus an abnormal year last year. And I was wondering what you've seen, especially as some of the mainline airlines are cutting capacity here. And just related to that, just what your plan is for the LIFT Academy in terms of how much of your needs that pipeline will deliver?
Matthew Koscal: Savi, thanks. This is Matt. I'll answer the second part first. LIFT Academy is positioned to satisfy about 20%, 25% of our hiring needs in a normal hiring year. So nothing changes in the throughput that we're planning to put through LIFT this year. It's been a great program, and the candidates that come through that perform exceptionally well and are incredibly loyal to the airline and their career path. As we look at the attrition trends, very much a status quo to the update we provided to you just a few weeks ago. Attrition remained through the quarter at normalized trends, going back to a pre-COVID standard, healthy level of attrition, going to the [ career ] carriers that we would like to see, healthy captains attriting on to our codeshare partners and the like. We would expect to see, and we're seeing just a little bit of the beginning of a slowdown in the attrition, just a seasonal slowdown as we go into the summer months. So right on plan. Our attrition curve and our hiring curve have been right on plan for us.
Operator: We've reached the end of the Q&A session. I will now turn the call back to David Grizzle, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, for closing remarks.
David Grizzle: Thank you, Cara. Thank you all for joining us this afternoon. As you've heard, we are very pleased with how our people are working to execute our plan and achieving results of which we are very proud. We are grateful to all of you for your continuing support. Have a great evening. Thank you very much.
Operator: That concludes today's call. Thank you, everyone, for attending. You may now disconnect.