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Crash Pad said:Hey I heard the big purchase of ASA is supposed to be announced on the 5th of July. I was wondering if you all had worked out the seniority list... If you could all post the list in detail for both a Mesa and Skywest purchase I would appreciate it.
I can't hear anyone say that without thinking of Zoolander. Anyone for an orange mocha frappaccino?PCL_128 said:Oh, snap!
~~~^~~~ said:Skywest folks - what is it like flying with United?
~~~^~~~ said:While the sale of ASA is speculative, $60 oil makes Delta's bankruptcy darn near certain. Then anyone's guess is as good as mine.
Delta is doing a good job of managing the company and reorganizing without all the mess at US Air, but $60 an barrell oil is more than undoing the progress that has been made.
Airtran getting 737's that can cherry pick Delta's few profitable routes is not helping things.
I'm kind of wondering what to do when Delta gets into more serious trouble. CRJ's are not the answer to high fuel costs. Maybe many of us will be flying Eclipse Jets 12 months from now.
Skywest folks - what is it like flying with United?
~~~^~~~ said:I'm kind of wondering what to do when Delta gets into more serious trouble. CRJ's are not the answer to high fuel costs. Maybe many of us will be flying Eclipse Jets 12 months from now.
michael707767 said:CRJs are not the answer with high fuel costs. It fascinates me that Delta keeps on adding them.
General Lee said:Fins,
Come on now, you really are pushing it again. It doesn't matter how high fuel gets, as long as you add fare increases to cover the costs. 7 fare increases have already been added.
Airtran is adding a lot of 737s, but they have lately been added to routes like DFW to LAS and LAX, and BWI to FLA. None of those routes affect DL.
viper548 said:It's like flying the Delta side except the passengers don't come out one at a time and we do manual manifests.
MedFlyer said:Delta Air Lines Inc., the third-largest U.S. airline, said again that it might have to file for bankruptcy if it can’t reduce costs to stem losses or if cash drops to an “unacceptably low level.” Delta said in a regulatory filing Wednesday that its ability to pay “significant obligations” and avoid bankruptcy this year will depend on jet-fuel prices and average fares. The price of fuel has increased 56% this year, and average fares rose less than 1% last month over 2004.
http://aogdesk.org/v-web/b2/index.php?p=877&c=1#comments
Apparently, those fare increases aren't doing as much as you might think. What you don't realize is that many of the fare increases only stick for a short period of time (a week or so), then they get rolled back with fare sales. Plus, fares are falling on other routes as LCC's launch new routes. Grinstein has said repeatedly that the fare increases aren't enough and since you believe everything Grinstein says, you must believe this too.
I guess Airtran adding ATL-CLT, ATL-SRQ, ATL-IND, ATL-RIC and ATL-CUN has no effect on DL either.![]()
The reason DL has held off on selling ASA (or Comair) is that they are waiting to see if they will have to file CH11. There's no point in selling ASA/Comair if you know you're going to have to file anyway. DL will need those assets in order to get out of CH11.