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Continental also held talks with American
By Justin Baer in New York
Friday Feb 15 2008 14:30
Continental Airlines (NYSE:CAL) , the US carrier that has had merger discussions with United Airlines, also has held talks with another rival, AMR (NYSE:AMR) , parent of American Airlines.
A person familiar with the matter described Continental's talks with AMR as preliminary, and said the airline was not close to an agreement with United.
Continental and AMR spokesmen both declined comment.
Record fuel costs and an expected slump in demand for air travel have driven many of the biggest US carriers to consider merging with a rival. Delta Air Lines is nearing an agreement with Northwest Airlines, people famliar with the negotiations say. The deal is expected to touch off a wave of consolidation within the industry, as carriers seek to lower costs and extend their service networks.
American has been largely left out of many of the consolidation scenarios pondered by industry executives, bankers and investors. The conventional wisdom was that American's status as the world's largest airline made any proposed deal a tough sell to antitrust regulators.
American and its pilots also appear far from an agreement on a new contract. A testy relationship with organised labour may make it impossible to secure support for a major merger, and leaders of the pilots union have already said they would be against such a move.
Nevertheless, some industry insiders were never convinced that American, feared by its peers in the years that followed deregulation in 1978 as the most aggressive and, at times, most ruthless competitor, would stand idle as its four biggest competitors merged around them.
Continental and Chicago-based United had held talks a year ago, after US Airways had launched a hostile bid for Delta, then still in bankruptcy. While Delta did fend off that bid to emerge from credit protection as an independent company, Continental and United executives kept in touch on a potential tie-up, the people said.
As Delta's talks with Northwest turned more serious, Continental and United's also gained steam.
By Justin Baer in New York
Friday Feb 15 2008 14:30
Continental Airlines (NYSE:CAL) , the US carrier that has had merger discussions with United Airlines, also has held talks with another rival, AMR (NYSE:AMR) , parent of American Airlines.
A person familiar with the matter described Continental's talks with AMR as preliminary, and said the airline was not close to an agreement with United.
Continental and AMR spokesmen both declined comment.
Record fuel costs and an expected slump in demand for air travel have driven many of the biggest US carriers to consider merging with a rival. Delta Air Lines is nearing an agreement with Northwest Airlines, people famliar with the negotiations say. The deal is expected to touch off a wave of consolidation within the industry, as carriers seek to lower costs and extend their service networks.
American has been largely left out of many of the consolidation scenarios pondered by industry executives, bankers and investors. The conventional wisdom was that American's status as the world's largest airline made any proposed deal a tough sell to antitrust regulators.
American and its pilots also appear far from an agreement on a new contract. A testy relationship with organised labour may make it impossible to secure support for a major merger, and leaders of the pilots union have already said they would be against such a move.
Nevertheless, some industry insiders were never convinced that American, feared by its peers in the years that followed deregulation in 1978 as the most aggressive and, at times, most ruthless competitor, would stand idle as its four biggest competitors merged around them.
Continental and Chicago-based United had held talks a year ago, after US Airways had launched a hostile bid for Delta, then still in bankruptcy. While Delta did fend off that bid to emerge from credit protection as an independent company, Continental and United executives kept in touch on a potential tie-up, the people said.
As Delta's talks with Northwest turned more serious, Continental and United's also gained steam.
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