Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You heard this from a Delta accountant?! Wow! those accountants are amazing!
Skywest inc/Xjt doesn't need help financing the aircraft. Delta is buying these so they can give them to someone else who can't get that financing.....Otherwise no reason to carry that debt on their books
Skywest inc/Xjt doesn't need help financing the aircraft. Delta is buying these so they can give them to someone else who can't get that financing.....Otherwise no reason to carry that debt on their books
Operator
We’ll take our next question from Michael Linenberg with Deutsche Bank.
Michael Linenberg - Deutsche Bank
Good morning, everyone. Two questions here. When we talked I guess it was Paul, you had talked about the fleet restructuring, Richard yourself as well, you talked about bringing on the 717s and the 737-900s. You also get the ability to add more, larger regional Jets, the 76-seaters and I believe you go from, I want to say, 255 up to 325. Are those airplanes going to be sourced from your current partners? Or will Delta be in the market? Will you be out there either putting those airplanes on your balance sheet or signing the master leases? And what’s the timing on that?
Ed Bastian
Well, we are in the process now of running a competition between Bombardier and Embraer and our expectation is that time around, by the end of the year we’ll have a pretty good idea of what direction we’re going to go. Our goal is to use that to take out a significant number of 50-seaters.
So we will look at all alternatives in terms of which balance sheet they end up on, the regional partner on Delta but when you think about it from a total liability perspective, what our goal is, is to take out the debt and significant costs that are part of owning all these 50-seaters. So when you think about say bringing in 40 76-seaters and taking out 60, 50-seaters, there’s a really good balance sheet and CASM trade there. So when you think about, regardless of where it ends up in terms of the balance sheet, we want to take a significant amount of debt off, to the extent we put that on, by buying 76-seaters.
Combining SkyWest and ASA may happen, but legacy Expressjet may be left swinging in the breeze. Supposedly their contract expectations are unreasonable, and the pilot group's militancy makes it a difficult cultural fit with the other two groups.
Hey, don't shoot the messenger. For what it's worth, there are quite a few LXJT guys saying things like:I hate to ruin this with a fact but.....It isn't possible with our transition and process agreement. It would take all three of us to accept the change in direction of a ASA/SKY merger and not XJET. XJT alpa would never approve. Nice wet dream the LASA guys have but not gonna happen. Sorry.
The sentiment that I see is that if it means having a concessionary contract, then keep us separate.
Hey, don't shoot the messenger. For what it's worth, there are quite a few LXJT guys saying things like:
Well the messenger is pretty naive to be the messenger on this one. Or more likely, they are posting flame bait. For the record, personally, I rather stay separate if merging us with ASA means taking a concessionary contract. That has nothing to do with your nonsense rumor. Are you willing to take a concession on a new contract?
No. Is yours willing to quit being whiny bitches?Is your MEC willing to agree to cancel the TPA agreement?
Very few pinnacle pilots understand this.
General Lee is female. Duh.