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9 Billion Loss in 2008

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Old School

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 17, 2005
Posts
115
As crude oil tops $110 per barrel, a worried hum heard in the U.S. airline industry in recent months is now building into a shrill alarm. The latest alert came Mar. 12 when JPMorgan Chase (JPM) downgraded seven large U.S. airlines and suggested the "best-case" scenario for the industry is a $4 billion loss for the year. "And if demand trends mirror prior recessions, a $9 billion loss can't be ruled out," JPMorgan analyst Jamie Baker wrote.
 
Raise ticket prices NOW!

It would seem that in this marketplace, the only way an increase in ticket prices (demand) can occur is if there is a decrease in "supply" (i.e.; seats). Once consolidation begins, so will the downsizing.

Who will be first to be thrown under the bus?

Skipper
 
It would seem that in this marketplace, the only way an increase in ticket prices (demand) can occur is if there is a decrease in "supply" (i.e.; seats). Once consolidation begins, so will the downsizing.

Who will be first to be thrown under the bus?

Skipper
Will it take someone going out of business to decrease the supply of seats so ticket prices will rise?

In my opinion the government made it worse for every airline by allowing US Airways to stay alive. That made it worse for Delta and then Northwest who then were also allowed to continue.

Somebody is going to have to go out of business in my opinion and the planes can not be just snapped up by the current airlines but allowed to sit in the desert.
 
jetflyer, good points.

The question is, who's going to go? Who's gonna be the first to fall?

Looks like ATA has a foot in the grave.
 
In my opinion the government made it worse for every airline by allowing US Airways to stay alive. That made it worse for Delta and then Northwest who then were also allowed to continue.
It goes back much further than that. This whole industry mess is a result of deregulation. It was the worst thing to ever happen to the companies, the employees, and the consumers. If the airlines really do go back into a cycle of massive losses this soon after barely starting a recovery, then we might finally see a return of the CAB and regulation. We're well past due for it.
 
How has deregulation been bad for the consumer? I haven't done any research on the subject but I would guess that ticket prices have been pretty flat relative to inflation over the past 15-20 years.
 
How has deregulation been bad for the consumer? I haven't done any research on the subject but I would guess that ticket prices have been pretty flat relative to inflation over the past 15-20 years.

I'd guess that a transcon ticket probably costs less than half of what it did 30 years ago in real dollars. "Flat" would represent a colossal improvement.
 
Ticket prices haven't really gone down much at all when accounting for inflation, but the product has suffered immeasurably. Lots of smaller cities have completely lost airline service, where they once had a 727. Those that have retained service have seen it downgraded to turboprops or cramped RJs except for the largest cities. When I was a kid, a USAir 737 took me from tiny little Charlie-West to CLT. Now? Not a mainline airplane in sight. The consumer has suffered, just not anywhere near the degree that we have.
 
How has deregulation been bad for the consumer? I haven't done any research on the subject but I would guess that ticket prices have been pretty flat relative to inflation over the past 15-20 years.

http://www.airlines.org/economics/finance/AirTravelVersusAverageBasket.htm

The chart didn't post correctly but here is the link. Ticket prices per mile grew by 1.5 times since 1978 while everything else has more than doubled.

Price of Air Travel versus Other Goods and Services



ITEM -- U.S. Good or Service Unit 1978* 1990 2006 GROWTH College Tuition: Public1 Year $688 $1,908 $5,836 8.5 x College Tuition: Private1 Year $2,958 $9,340 $22,218 7.5 x Prescription Drugs2 Index 61.6 181.7 363.9 5.9 x New Single-Family Home3 Home $55,700 $122,900 $246,500 4.4 x New Vehicle6 Vehicle $6,470 $15,900 $28,450 4.4 x Unleaded Gasoline7 Gallon $0.67 $1.16 $2.59 3.9 x CPI (Urban-All Items)2 CPI-U 65.2 130.6 201.6 3.1 x Movie Ticket8 Ticket $2.34 $4.22 $6.55 2.8 x First-Class Postage5 Stamp $0.15 $0.25 $0.39 2.6 x Whole Milk2 Index 81.0 124.4 181.6 2.2 x Grade-A Large Eggs2 Dozen $0.82 $1.01 $1.31 1.6 x Air Travel: International4 Mile 7.49¢ 10.83¢ 11.85¢ 1.6 x Air Travel: Domestic4 Mile 8.49¢ 13.43¢ 13.00¢ 1.5 x
 
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PCL-

Deregulation the problem? Have you studied much on the subject of economics, or on the history of the airline industry? Price-fixing, inefficiency, but comparatively higher pilot salaries doesn't equate to economic health and profitability. The biggest difference between that that era and this one is the price of oil.
 
As pilots we have zero control over the cost of oil, the dollar and recessions. We do have control over the second highest cost for our companies, wages. Now I'm not saying to run to the company and say please cut our wages but it might be the time to really think hard about a second round of paycuts. Lets discuss it amongst our Union Leadership and figure out the best strategy. Maybe it is regulation? maybe a national line of seniority? Lets get our collective voices heard to our great union. I don't want a paycut or sudden change but sometimes we have no choice.:(
 
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You've gotta love instructordude. Always entertaining. :)
 

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