EPISODE · Feb 23, 2026 · 20 MIN
Is Your Aircraft Worth More DEAD Than Alive? — The Brutal Truth About Part-Out Economics | EP 24
from VREF | The Truth About the Aviation Market · host Jason Zilberbrand
Podcast: The Truth About the Market Host: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREFMost aircraft don’t die in a dramatic way.There’s no crash. No grounding order. No public failure.Just a quiet shift in the math.A moment when the market stops valuing the aircraft as a flying machine… and starts valuing it as inventory.In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason Zilberbrand breaks down one of the least discussed — yet most financially significant — strategies in business aviation:The aircraft part-out.Framed around a real-world Challenger 604 acquisition, Jason explains why some buyers don’t purchase aging aircraft for lift…They purchase them for liquidation strategy.If you’ve ever assumed that:Depreciation is just something you absorb over timeResale value is the only exit strategyMaintenance programs are about smoothing expensesA damaged aircraft should always be repairedLenders underwrite based on “market value” aloneThis episode will fundamentally change how you view aircraft economics.Inside Episode 24Jason walks through the structural reality behind teardown economics — and why institutional players already model this, even if owners don’t.Here’s what we cover:Why an aging large cabin aircraft can trade below the aggregate value of its engines aloneThe divergence between “whole value” and “component value” — and how it creates arbitrage opportunitiesThe reason maintenance program enrollment quietly strengthens part-out liquidity years laterWhy lenders increasingly underwrite two exit scenarios: orderly resale and forced liquidationThe invisible infrastructure required to execute a real teardown — and why most individual owners cannot do it aloneHow heavy maintenance events, program expirations, and avionics mandates trigger economic inflection pointsWhy insurers sometimes prefer dismantling over repairing — and what that means for collateral floorsThe uncomfortable truth that some aircraft are financially healthier disassembled than flyingNone of this happens overnight.It builds.Operating costs rise. Buyer pools narrow. Liquidity tightens.And then, almost without announcement, the aircraft crosses an invisible line.From transportation asset… to capital stack.From flying machine… to distributed global inventory.The Bottom Line:Aircraft are not real estate.They are not cars.They are not even traditional equipment finance.They are componentized financial structures with independent liquidity layers.Engines. APUs. Landing gear. Avionics. Rotables.Each with its own demand curve. Each with its own market.When whole-aircraft resale declines faster than parts demand, value doesn’t disappear.It changes form.Sophisticated lenders understand this. Institutional asset managers model it. Insurance underwriters plan for it.Most owners do not....Full PODCAST NOTES can be found at https://vref.com/podcastVREF.comFly safe. Stay smart.
What this episode covers
Podcast: The Truth About the Market Host: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREFMost aircraft don’t die in a dramatic way.There’s no crash. No grounding order. No public failure.Just a quiet shift in the math.A moment when the market stops valuing the aircraft as a flying machine… and starts valuing it as inventory.In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason Zilberbrand breaks down one of the least discussed — yet most financially significant — strategies in business aviation:The aircraft part-out.Framed around a real-world Challenger 604 acquisition, Jason explains why some buyers don’t purchase aging aircraft for lift…They purchase them for liquidation strategy.If you’ve ever assumed that:Depreciation is just something you absorb over timeResale value is the only exit strategyMaintenance programs are about smoothing expensesA damaged aircraft should always be repairedLenders underwrite based on “market value” aloneThis episode will fundamentally change how you view aircraft economics.Inside Episode 24Jason walks through the structural reality behind teardown economics — and why institutional players already model this, even if owners don’t.Here’s what we cover:Why an aging large cabin aircraft can trade below the aggregate value of its engines aloneThe divergence between “whole value” and “component value” — and how it creates arbitrage opportunitiesThe reason maintenance program enrollment quietly strengthens part-out liquidity years laterWhy lenders increasingly underwrite two exit scenarios: orderly resale and forced liquidationThe invisible infrastructure required to execute a real teardown — and why most individual owners cannot do it aloneHow heavy maintenance events, program expirations, and avionics mandates trigger economic inflection pointsWhy insurers sometimes prefer dismantling over repairing — and what that means for collateral floorsThe uncomfortable truth that some aircraft are financially healthier disassembled than flyingNone of this happens overnight.It builds.Operating costs rise. Buyer pools narrow. Liquidity tightens.And then, almost without announcement, the aircraft crosses an invisible line.From transportation asset… to capital stack.From flying machine… to distributed global inventory.The Bottom Line:Aircraft are not real estate.They are not cars.They are not even traditional equipment finance.They are componentized financial structures with independent liquidity layers.Engines. APUs. Landing gear. Avionics. Rotables.Each with its own demand curve. Each with its own market.When whole-aircraft resale declines faster than parts demand, value doesn’t disappear.It changes form.Sophisticated lenders understand this. Institutional asset managers model it. Insurance underwriters plan for it.Most owners do not....Full PODCAST NOTES can be found at https://vref.com/podcastVREF.comFly safe. Stay smart.
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Is Your Aircraft Worth More DEAD Than Alive? — The Brutal Truth About Part-Out Economics | EP 24
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