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You called it.Hey fins, I told you I thought he could be our man.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Guess this means the Delta campus isn't getting a Starbucks....
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You called it.Hey fins, I told you I thought he could be our man.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Speculation is he's gone. The question is, where?Hopefully Whitehurst won't feel like Malally and leave Delta because he didn't get the job. He's one guy that we need to keep around and hopefully this won't cause him to leave. He's still 15 years younger than Anderson so maybe Whitehurst can be the next CEO or the next one after the next one.
Well liked at NWA? Where on earth did you hear that? He was certainly not well liked by the rank and file. Maybe the board or some other anti labor groups at NWA liked him.
IMHO Whitehurst was a much better pick. The fact that he is not mentioned in the PR and wasn't talked to by Anderson does not give a positive indication regarding his future role....... someone tell me why I'm wrong, please.
You're not. Whitehurst was the better pick, and the BOD dropped the ball. No other way to put it.
I hope we don't lose Mr. Whitehurst, but I fear we will. He deserves better.
You're not. Whitehurst was the better pick, and the BOD dropped the ball. No other way to put it.
I hope we don't lose Mr. Whitehurst, but I fear we will. He deserves better.
Incoming Delta CEO says no plan for Northwest deal
Tue Aug 21, 2007 5:02PM EDT
NEW YORK, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The incoming chief executive of Delta Air Lines Inc (DAL.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Tuesday there were "no plans or intentions" to merge Delta with rival Northwest Airlines Corp (NWA.N: Quote, Profile, Research).
Richard Anderson, who was named as Delta's next chief executive earlier on Tuesday, made the comments on a conference call with reporters after being named as the successor to Gerald Grinstein, who retires on Sept. 1.
The appointment of Anderson, a former CEO of Northwest, fanned speculation from earlier this year that the two airlines, which emerged from bankruptcy a few months ago, might merge.
Bye Bye--General Lee
You are correct; however, I think the point is that he (Anderson) isn't leaving UHC for the money, he is making a lot there. He definitely made more there than at NWA.For the record the President of UHC has made a lot of money. He has made billions for its investors. It makes a lot more money than you think.
Calyon Securities upgrades Neutral to Add. Calyon upgrades DAL to Add from Neutral on valuation. The firm believes that at the naming of Mr. Anderson to the post and the elevation of the CFO, Ed Bastian, to President means that DAL is seriously preparing for industry consolidation and this should excite the markets over the coming days. They do not believe, however, that there will be any immediate deal. Nonetheless, firm says this move should make the industry exciting this fall. They say the question is not if DAL wants consolidation, but will they be a buyer or a seller; they believe DAL is better suited as a seller. Firm says DAL's system would fit very well with network carriers such as NWA, UAUA, particularly due to their strong Pacific operations.
Could the fact that the Northwest name must remain on the airplanes to continue the landing rights in Japan mean Delta would be the seller and Northwest the buyer? Hmmmmm
Could the fact that the Northwest name must remain on the airplanes to continue the landing rights in Japan mean Delta would be the seller and Northwest the buyer? Hmmmmm
I think more telling is the poison pill. To fend off a takeover by USAir/America West, Delta had to forego a poison pill provision. This would make it easier for Delta to be acquired. NWA, on the other hand, could not be so easily acquired as one would have to pony up a very healthy premium.Could the fact that the Northwest name must remain on the airplanes to continue the landing rights in Japan mean Delta would be the seller and Northwest the buyer? Hmmmmm
I think more telling is the poison pill. To fend off a takeover by USAir/America West, Delta had to forego a poison pill provision. This would make it easier for Delta to be acquired. NWA, on the other hand, could not be so easily acquired as one would have to pony up a very healthy premium.
Schwanker
Complete employee implosion if NWA were to take over. Unlikely. I would think that IF there were a merger, it would have Delta's name on it, with an ATL base and a DL management team. I don't know if it could get any worse over there at NWA, but a buyout of DL would lead to even more problems on the Southern Front. Nah.
Bye Bye--General Lee
Complete employee implosion if NWA were to take over. Unlikely. I would think that IF there were a merger, it would have Delta's name on it, with an ATL base and a DL management team. I don't know if it could get any worse over there at NWA, but a buyout of DL would lead to even more problems on the Southern Front. Nah.
Bye Bye--General Lee
SchwankerComplete employee implosion if NWA were to take over.
By whom? DAL or NWA employees. Why the implosion?
Unlikely.
I agree. It is hard to vision a merger of any of the top 5 legacies passing regulators. If it were to happen, the near future is probably the time. Don't forget the "golden share" NWA has over CAL. Another huge variable that will come into play if consolidation is forthcoming.
I would think that IF there were a merger, it would have Delta's name on it, with an ATL base and a DL management team.
It's nice you would think that. Does it make you feel better? I'm not sure regulators or financers put a whole lot of weight on feelings.
I don't know if it could get any worse over there at NWA, but a buyout of DL would lead to even more problems on the Southern Front. Nah.
I could get worse at NWA. A lot will be determined pending the outcome of TDC implementation. Not sure what you mean about problems on the Southern Front. Are things not going well there?
Bye Bye--General Lee
Ummm no. IF the two did merge, a part of each name would be on the new name. Delta would bring the word "Delta" and Northwest would bring the word "Airlines." The combination, you see, would be "Delta Airlines." Anyway, I don't think there will a merger between the two, and Delta has it's own Asian expansion plans already.
Bye Bye--General Lee