Activist shareholder Elliott Investment Management has bought a $1.9
billion stake in Southwest Airlines and is seeking to force out the CEO of the
airline, which has struggled with operational and financial problems.
Shares in the airline rose 7 percent Monday, 10 June, their second-best
day since 2020.
In a letter to Southwest’s board, the investment firm complained that
Southwest’s stock price has dropped more than 50 percent in the last three
years. Elliott said Southwest has failed to evolve, hurting its ability to
compete with other carriers. The firm blamed the Dallas-based carrier’s massive
flight cancellations in December 2022 on what it described as the airline’s
outdated software and operational processes. “Poor execution and leadership’s stubborn unwillingness to evolve the
Company’s strategy have led to deeply disappointing results for shareholders,
employees and customers alike,” the investment firm said in the letter,
dated Monday.
Southwest CEO Robert Jordan “has delivered unacceptable financial and
operational performance quarter after quarter,” the letter read. It said Jordan
and former CEO Gary Kelly, now the airline’s executive chairman, “are not up to
the task of modernizing Southwest.”