Newjetjockey
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2003
- Posts
- 173
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[/FONT]"Next week, when United emerges out from under the protective cloak of the judge, it's essentially an airline with no significant competitive or cost advantages over its main competitors such as American or Continental, both of which have slashed costs without entirely slashing their employees' financial jugular. ".
Reportedly, the airline's financial wizards - the same ones in control before the airline did a one-and-a-half gainer into bankruptcy - have based the future on $50 oil. Wonderful wishful thinking, especially when one considers that crude closed on Friday at just under $69. Give or take, that would indicate that United is coming out of "chapter" with its fuel-cost estimates already about 30% out of whack.
[FONT=Tahoma, Verdan, Lucida][FONT=Tahoma, Verdan, Lucida]
[FONT=Tahoma, Verdan, Lucida]. . .the agency that provided funding to a number of Bombardier customers . . . . is welcoming home 42 CRJs, the result of returns from Northwest and the shutdown of Independence Air. [/FONT][FONT=Tahoma, Verdan, Lucida]. . . EDC is putting on a brave face, noting that they can place these aircraft easily at other carriers, which, in this environment, is an expression of wonderful optimism, especially in light of the fact that some CRJs are, as we speak, being scrapped for parts. [/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, Verdan, Lucida]. . . . .One of the major reasons that we're seeing RJs being pulled from service is that they are increasingly non-viable in many of the mission applications that mega-carriers have put them in. Like long-haul O&D service to points in Florida. (Columbia to Tampa?) Or as fill-in frequencies in key, high-density competitive markets. ORD-ATL? Or in thin, long-haul hub spokes. (DEN-RDU?) In many (not all, but a whole lot) of these applications, the RJ is about as competitive as bringing a knife to a gunfight.[/FONT]
Ty you fool!
Ty Webb said:I know . . . . I wouldn't have spent the money to buy your wife dinner if I had known that I could've just taken her right to the hotel.
Ty Webb said:I know . . . . I wouldn't have spent the money to buy your wife dinner if I had known that I could've just taken her right to the hotel.
Ty Webb said:I know . . . . I wouldn't have spent the money to buy your wife dinner if I had known that I could've just taken her right to the hotel.
ESS PWR said:My guess, for what is worth, is that CAL and UAL will remain independent unless AMR is involved in a merger first.
While UAL has succesfully slashed unit cost, it remains to be seen how competitive they will be since they are still carrying a large debt load. Is unfortunate that employees at UAL have lost nearly everything while in BK and mgmt will get huge rewards next week for doing so.
I am not so confident UAL employees will feel fairly treated in a merger with CAL, since their career expectations have been significantly reduced during BK. From what I know, today CAL employees are facing a brighter future as far as career expectations and an arbitrator will probably see that.
Is nearly imposible to know what will happen because during a merger things are looked at the moment it happens and how healthy the corporations are.
Sonny Crockett said:I wouldn't call CAL "healthy" either.
densoo said:Especially in reference to union leverage or pilot unity. While a merger of lists goes by ALPA rules, I would imagine if one pilot group plays dead and the other one goes for the glory the outcome will be lopsided.
atpcliff said:I have no idea how to figure out which companies will be good in the long.