Houston Chronicle

Southwest Airlines isn’t ruling out selling to Warren Buffett.

- By David Koenig

DALLAS — If Warren Buffett is interested in buying Southwest Airlines, he's not telling the airline's CEO directly.

Southwest Chairman and CEO Gary Kelly said Tuesday that he hasn't talked to Buffett since the Berkshire Hathaway CEO sparked speculatio­n with a comment that he wouldn't rule out owning an entire airline.

Berkshire Hathaway already owns 8.1 percent of Southwest, making it the Dallas airline's secondbigg­est shareholde­r behind Primecap Management Co.

Berkshire Hathaway also holds major stakes in American, Delta and United airlines.

Logical target

Some analysts and columnists argue that Southwest could be the financier's most logical target because of its low-cost business model, investment-grade credit rating and potential for growth. It wouldn't be cheap, however — Southwest's market value is around $33 billion.

Berkshire Hathaway, which is based in Omaha, Neb., didn't immediatel­y comment.

Buffett's company is sitting on about $116 billion in cash, and he has said the company could make one or two “huge” acquisitio­ns.

Kelly said Southwest talks regularly to all its shareholde­rs including Berkshire Hathaway, “but obviously I can't speak for them or what their interest might be.”

Kelly made the comments to reporters after a ceremony marking the opening of a $250 million building to house 2,000 employees and Southwest's pilot-training center.

Flights to Hawaii

Southwest hopes to get federal certificat­ion that it needs to fly to Hawaii in time to start flights by year end, although they could be pushed back into 2019.

Kelly said Southwest is “strongly considerin­g” augmenting flights from California with service between the Hawaiian islands — a bold challenge to Hawaiian Airlines, which dominates intraislan­d service.

Bullet train

Kelly also said he is not opposed to bullet trains running between Dallas and Houston — a cornerston­e route for Southwest — unless the trains receive taxpayer subsidies, which he said would be unfair competitio­n.

 ?? Sergio Flores / Bloomberg ?? Gary Kelly, chairman and chief executive officer of Southwest Airlines, left, presents a model plane to U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan during a Southwest town hall event this week in Dallas.
Sergio Flores / Bloomberg Gary Kelly, chairman and chief executive officer of Southwest Airlines, left, presents a model plane to U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan during a Southwest town hall event this week in Dallas.

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