Speedtape
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2004
- Posts
- 1,973
Take a look at two stable and successful regional airlines. Skywest and Republic Air. Both high quality products for their division and both moderately cost effective operators. However looking back on a 10 year line Skywest Airlines stock has continually averaged 2-7 dollars a share higher. Good evidence and reports suggest Unions instill fear in investors and the market price for a company's stock who is under a CBA will trail those under freedom. If the pilot group is unable to convince you unions are or are not desired in the industry most certainly the stock market speaks for itself. Just some thought for those of us at Skywest and other carriers about to vote/not vote.
Take a look at American Airlines. It is totally unionized. After their restructure, the stock was initially in the $1 range. Where is it today?
This is the most lame threat I have ever heard. Investors make decisions on whether a company is profitable and whether there is growth potential.
ASA became more profitable and had more growth after the pilots and flight attendants organized. I am not making the suggestion that profits and growth resulted from unionization. I am merely saying that your inference is HOGWASH.
I would say that when labor contracts are in place, that costs are known for a given period of time, making certain forecasts more predictable.
Try a new angle!
Last edited: