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FedEx May Cut Jobs, Add Fewer Stores and Park Planes

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No- it's the contract- i have no doubt fdx would have furloughed by now if the contract didn't mitigate it. give credit where it's due.
 
I don't think I've ever seen an airline live up to that.

Fredex and UPS are logistic companies that involve transportation, shipping, and short term storage. They are not airlines. They could just as easily buy railroad cars and do the same thing. They are able to remake themselves where no true airline could ever venture.
 
No- it's the contract- i have no doubt fdx would have furloughed by now if the contract didn't mitigate it. give credit where it's due.

There is also the factor that any furlough would virtually empty the HKG FO slot, which is not completely filled in the first place!

Thank god for our terrible FDA LOA!
 
DATE:12/22/08
SOURCE:Air Transport Intelligence
FedEx defers delivery of 777 freighters

FedEx is deferring delivery of its first Boeing 777 Freighters by up to 17 months, resulting in the postponement of $275 million in commitments from 2009 into the future.

The cargo operator's November 2006 order for the 777F was a blow to Boeing rival Airbus after FedEx cancelled its order for 10 A380s due to programme delays.

FedEx still has 15 777F aircraft on order, but deliveries of four aircraft originally scheduled for next year have been rescheduled to 2010. Ten aircraft are scheduled for delivery in 2011 followed by the final delivery in 2012.

Boeing on 14 November announced a three month delay of the 777F first delivery to Air France, citing the two month strike by its machinists.

Two aircraft are scheduled to complete flight tests this month.
 
Fredex and UPS are logistic companies that involve transportation, shipping, and short term storage.
Brilliant! Passenger "Airlines" are also logistic companies that involve transportation, shipping, and short term storage. Passenger "Airlines" like Cargo "Airlines" provide a service as their product. Both type "Airlines" serve customers that have either "time sensitive" or "price sensitive" needs, and sometimes a combination of both. Although there are many differences in these type "Airlines," there are more similarities.

They are not airlines.
That depends on the definition of "airlines." What is "is"? They are not a "passenger" airline. However, they fly airplanes through hubs on a schedule under 121 rules. And, more importanly, they can pack alot more revenue in the same volume of space that a passenger occupies at a "passenger" airline.

They could just as easily buy railroad cars and do the same thing. They are able to remake themselves where no true airline could ever venture.
They could also use blimps, which FedX explored once, and electronic transmissions (ZAPMAIL). However, FedX's core business was built using Airplanes that operated in an "Airline" type operation. Like an Airline, it was and still is a "Service" business. The "high-yield" service, an "Airline" term, was carriage of Overnight Letters, payrolls, and later, Just-In-Time inventories for "Time-Sensitive" Customers. This initial and still major part of FEDEX poducts/services can only be accomplished utilizing "Airplanes!" Railroad cars would not work across time zones over night.


Because of progressive Managements, both of these companies are able to not only remake but evolve utilizing technology and tools. An airplane is one of the tools they use, and to date, for certain products/services, there is no replacement and want be one soon--certainly not a railroad car! FedX and UPS, the airplane part, are much more like an "Airline" than a Railroad!
 
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FedEx actually charges a premium for a superior product -- neither concept is part of the WN business plan. When FedEx starts coming into places with predatory pricing and destroying other companies you'll have a point. Until then you don't.

PIPE

I don't think that FedEX makes their pilot applicants buy/get their type rating in order to get hired either.
 

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