On Your Six
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- Mar 8, 2004
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Wow! There's a tremendous amount of conflicting information in the news about Delta and their financial outlook. Clearly recent results are not positive. I wonder what GG is referring to when he says "structural changes" - could this refer to jettisoning DCI (spin off or sell off but maintain operational/feed benefits)?
Seems like a lot of conflicting information and guesswork at the moment. I don't think Chap 11 would be such a bad thing if the debt could be restructured... It should be interesting...
CEO: Delta can avoid Chapter 11 filing this year
By Marilyn Adams, USA TODAY
Delta Air Lines CEO Gerald Grinstein said Monday that he has no plans to close an airport hub or to ask the pilots union for more pay cuts to avert a possible bankruptcy filing later this year.
Delta, the USA's No. 3 carrier, lost $1.1 billion last quarter after losing an industry record $5.2 billion in 2004. The airline has warned that a cash crunch late this year might force a Chapter 11 filing. (Related story: Delta warns of substantial losses for rest of year)
But in an interview with USA TODAY, Grinstein said no drastic new cost cuts are necessary.
"Our plan is to make structural changes to the airline, rather than temporary changes," he said.
Grinstein, 72, had been a longtime member of the Delta board when he was tapped to replace former CEO Leo Mullin. He has held the top job since January 2004.
Delta narrowly averted a bankruptcy filing late last year by negotiating $1 billion a year in cuts from its pilots union, borrowing to raise cash and other steps.
It recently closed its hub at Dallas/Fort Worth airport and is cutting 7,000 jobs companywide. It has simplified its fares and reorganized the schedule at its giant Atlanta hub airport to get more flights out of the same planes.
But Delta has been hit hard by record fuel prices this year and brutal fare competition on its domestic routes.
It's facing $3.1 billion in pension payments in the next three years. To raise cash, it's considering selling assets such as one or both of its wholly owned regional carriers, Cincinnati-based Comair and Atlanta-based Atlantic Southeast.
In a research note in late April, Calyon Securities airline analyst Ray Neidl estimated Delta is burning through $4 million in cash a day. At that rate, he said, Delta's cash would dwindle to a dangerously low $466 million by year's end. "Delta appears to be the most likely candidate for a bankruptcy filing this year based on its liquidity position," Neidl said.
Delta competitors United Airlines and US Airways have opted for bankruptcy protection as they attempt to restructure.
Following US Airways' lead, United is seeking to terminate its costly pension plans, which would give it an advantage over competitors.
"It's troubling to see one set of rules for one company," Grinstein said of United. Yet Grinstein says he does not regret the decision not to seek Chapter 11 protection last year and thinks bankruptcy this year is avoidable.
CFO Michael Palumbo, who was also interviewed, said he could not predict when Delta would have to decide whether to file.
He declined to talk in detail about how Delta would raise financing to continue operating in bankruptcy. Virtually all of Delta's collateral already has been pledged to lenders to raise cash.
Delta's cost-cutting plans are having an impact, however, the executives said. This year, Delta will spend $2 billion less cash than in 2004, and spending will drop an additional $1 billion next year.
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Seems like a lot of conflicting information and guesswork at the moment. I don't think Chap 11 would be such a bad thing if the debt could be restructured... It should be interesting...
CEO: Delta can avoid Chapter 11 filing this year
By Marilyn Adams, USA TODAY
Delta Air Lines CEO Gerald Grinstein said Monday that he has no plans to close an airport hub or to ask the pilots union for more pay cuts to avert a possible bankruptcy filing later this year.
Delta, the USA's No. 3 carrier, lost $1.1 billion last quarter after losing an industry record $5.2 billion in 2004. The airline has warned that a cash crunch late this year might force a Chapter 11 filing. (Related story: Delta warns of substantial losses for rest of year)
But in an interview with USA TODAY, Grinstein said no drastic new cost cuts are necessary.
"Our plan is to make structural changes to the airline, rather than temporary changes," he said.
Grinstein, 72, had been a longtime member of the Delta board when he was tapped to replace former CEO Leo Mullin. He has held the top job since January 2004.
Delta narrowly averted a bankruptcy filing late last year by negotiating $1 billion a year in cuts from its pilots union, borrowing to raise cash and other steps.
It recently closed its hub at Dallas/Fort Worth airport and is cutting 7,000 jobs companywide. It has simplified its fares and reorganized the schedule at its giant Atlanta hub airport to get more flights out of the same planes.
But Delta has been hit hard by record fuel prices this year and brutal fare competition on its domestic routes.
It's facing $3.1 billion in pension payments in the next three years. To raise cash, it's considering selling assets such as one or both of its wholly owned regional carriers, Cincinnati-based Comair and Atlanta-based Atlantic Southeast.
In a research note in late April, Calyon Securities airline analyst Ray Neidl estimated Delta is burning through $4 million in cash a day. At that rate, he said, Delta's cash would dwindle to a dangerously low $466 million by year's end. "Delta appears to be the most likely candidate for a bankruptcy filing this year based on its liquidity position," Neidl said.
Delta competitors United Airlines and US Airways have opted for bankruptcy protection as they attempt to restructure.
Following US Airways' lead, United is seeking to terminate its costly pension plans, which would give it an advantage over competitors.
"It's troubling to see one set of rules for one company," Grinstein said of United. Yet Grinstein says he does not regret the decision not to seek Chapter 11 protection last year and thinks bankruptcy this year is avoidable.
CFO Michael Palumbo, who was also interviewed, said he could not predict when Delta would have to decide whether to file.
He declined to talk in detail about how Delta would raise financing to continue operating in bankruptcy. Virtually all of Delta's collateral already has been pledged to lenders to raise cash.
Delta's cost-cutting plans are having an impact, however, the executives said. This year, Delta will spend $2 billion less cash than in 2004, and spending will drop an additional $1 billion next year.
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