Acknowledging it is tough to find a “silver lining” in U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent “Liberation Day” tariff announcement, Sun Country CEO Jude Bricker believes opportunities to acquire used aircraft could emerge.
The Aviation Week Network Fleet Discovery database shows Minneapolis-based Sun Country has 41 Boeing 737-800s in service plus an additional three of the type that are inactive. This year, the carrier is expanding the number of 737-800F freighters it operates for Amazon from 12 to 20.
“Any time in history where you see a pullback of demand across the globe, at the same time aircraft values have been pretty dramatically affected,” Bricker concluded at the recent CAPA Americas Airline Leader Summit in Grand Cayman.
He ticked off the 2008 great financial crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic and the September 2001 terrorist attacks as times when the industry “saw really significant drops in aircraft values, particularly on the used side.”
On April 2, the Trump administration rolled out sweeping tariffs for numerous countries. Then on April 9, Trump announced a 90-day pause on some of the tariffs but said the rate for China would rise to 145%.
If aircraft values do decline, “I think we’re going to see some buying opportunities,” said Bricker, noting it has been roughly two years “since we’ve been able to get a deal done at the valuations, we need to buy aircraft in order to make money with.”
Highlighting a data point he’s been “very public about,” Bricker said that during the pandemic, “I could buy an engine for an imputed value of about $500 a cycle,” and now that valuation has jumped to $1300 per cycle in evaluations the carrier has seen in the last couple of months.
As it exited the pandemic, Sun Country had a strong capital base and opted to buy a number of aircraft, Bricker said, many of which are on lease to other airlines. Earlier in 2025, Sun Country CFO David Davis said the airline extended lease return dates on three of four 737-900s on lease with another carrier, and now those aircraft are being returned in May, September and November of 2025 and in November 2026.
As the longer-term fluctuations in demand become tougher to predict, Bricker told conference attendees Sun Country was “selling strongly” through the second quarter and that summer trends look positive.