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Delta 717's

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Getting rid of them, the delivery schedule is over a 3-4 year period. We only want them for five total and then they are gone.

The 717s? Not what I heard. DL keeps them through the leases (2020-2024) with the option to buy them at "then value", AKA "real cheap" via Boeing.


Bye Bye---General Lee
 
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The 717s? Not what I heard. DL keeps them through the leases (2020-2024) with the option to buy them at "then value", AKA "real cheap" via Boeing.


Bye Bye---General Lee
AirTran had 18 year leases on the B717s with deliveries occuring between 1999 and 2006. Lease expiration for B717s is from 2017-2024 unless Southwest, Delta, and Boeing negotiated something else.

I doubt the B717 will be in high demand between 2017 and 2024 so I would imagine Delta could extend the lease or purchase them outright on favorable terms. Any word on if Delta is looking at obtaining the 25 former Midwest Express B717s as well?
 
I don't know the exact numbers per class, but I believe Compass also has a limit per year, meaning if there are a lot of classes and the number is hit early, there might not be any in the later classes of the year. I don't think PNCL has that restriction. I wouldn't be surprised if half of each class is comprised of flow ups. But again, I don't remember the exact numbers.


Bye Bye---General Lee

Not sure about the numbers on Compass/Mesaba flow ups, but the Pinnacle guys only have a guaranteed interview, no promise of a job. Beyond that, the contractual restriction is 35% of each new hire class has to come from an ALPA represented DCI carrier. You can read the actual contract language below, but the language is pretty loose with enough caveats and loopholes to make it effectively meaningless. My opinion, we will probably exceed 35% anyway, just based on who will be available and qualified whenever hiring starts.

Here's the contract language.

The Company will fill a minimum of 35% of the aggregate of all positions in Delta pilot new-hire classes in each trailing twelve-month period (to the extent airmen are available) with ALPA-represented airmen at Delta Connection Carriers, subject to such airmen meeting the Company’s competitive hiring standards, and subject to the Company’s objectives for diversity and experience among newly hired pilots. Airmen who flow up pursuant to LOA #9 and LOA #10 count toward satisfaction of such minimum percentage.
 
The same airplanes that made money flying against The greatest airline ever.

It sucked that you didn't OWN them. My God, an entire fleet that is leased. That would have been my first clue that things aren't always as they appear.
 
AirTran had 18 year leases on the B717s with deliveries occuring between 1999 and 2006. Lease expiration for B717s is from 2017-2024 unless Southwest, Delta, and Boeing negotiated something else.

I doubt the B717 will be in high demand between 2017 and 2024 so I would imagine Delta could extend the lease or purchase them outright on favorable terms. Any word on if Delta is looking at obtaining the 25 former Midwest Express B717s as well?

I think the plan is to purchase them outright after the lease are up, for whatever they are worth THEN. The MD90s coming now are supposedly $8-9 million each including the engines. As far as the Midwest birds go, I think they were looked at, and I don't know if some of them went to Mexicana Click (then BK) and maybe some went to a European carrier called Volotea. Blue1 still flies them in Denmark also I believe. Maybe they will go to Delta someday.... I don't know... Hopefully.



Bye Bye---General Lee
 
Of course Delta is getting more used aircraft. Their balance sheet won't allow for the procurement of newer more fuel efficient aircraft:

Year End 2010 DAL Stockholder equity: $800 million
Year End 2012 DAL Stockholder deficit: $2.1 billion

Heading the wrong direction there General. Delta going need some bigger profits to be able to pay for all those pension obligations and interest payments to service their long term debt. Isn't it better to have more assets on your balance sheet than liabilities?
C'mon General. You answered my softball question earlier but didn't even take a swing at the fastball :)
 
C'mon General. You answered my softball question earlier but didn't even take a swing at the fastball :)

I have discussed the pension liabilities, which is a lot like the National Debt, it supposedly will be paid down, eventually. Bag fees, more business pax flying, and paying down other debt to lower interest payments ($18 billion in debt in 2009 will go to $10 billion by the end of this year, lowering yearly interest payments by $500 million per year---pretty good), all help. Are there some big obligations? Probably. Does it all need to be paid down now? Probably not. Becoming one of the top airlines in the World and becoming consistently profitable will help out a lot. Things are looking UP. (I just hit a triple. ;). )


Bye Bye---General Lee
 

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