WESTJET AIRLINES $15.18 (Toronto symbol WJA; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (1-877-493-7853; www.westjet.com; Shares outstanding: 109.1 million; Market cap: $1.9 billion; Dividend yield: 3.7%) serves 100 destinations in North America, Central America, the Caribbean and Europe. Its fleet of 108 modern Boeing 737s are 30% more fuel efficient than older jets. The company reported lower revenue and profits in the latest quarter. Weakness in the Alberta market offset the benefit of 25% lower fuel prices. Fuel typically accounts for a third of the airline’s operating expenses. In the three months ended December 31, 2015, WestJet’s revenue fell 3.6%, to $958.7 million from $994.4 million a year earlier. Earnings fell 30.1%, to $63.4 million, or $0.51 a share. A year earlier, they were $90.7 million, or $0.71 a share. Aside from the revenue drop, higher costs, including maintenance and salaries, contributed to the earnings decline. The latest quarter also included a pre-tax foreign exchange loss of $10.0 million. Since the end of the quarter, though, the company’s load factor has improved—it rose to 80.1% in January 2016 from 79.5% in January 2015. (Load factor is the percentage of seats occupied by paying passengers.) WestJet had fuller flights despite increasing its capacity by 7.0% to meet higher demand. The company flew 1.7 million passengers in January 2016; that was the highest monthly total in WestJet’s history. The company is forecast to earn $2.37 a share in 2016. The stock trades at a low 6.4 times that estimate. WestJet is a top pick for 2016.