Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Hey LOOK, Delta will have an extra $2 billion in "Free Money!"

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

General Lee

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 24, 2002
Posts
20,442
Hey LOOK, Delta targets an extra $2 billion in "Free Money!"

Delta Targets $2 Billion in `Free Money' From Repairs, Freight

By Mary Jane Credeur - Oct 5, 2010 9:01 PM MT

Adding cargo and maintenance sales would help Chief Executive Officer Richard Anderson narrow the gap with United Continental Holdings Inc.

Delta Airlines is taking on more maintenance work for other carriers in-house and working to expand its cargo business in a bid to boost revenue from those services to $2 billion within three years.



The world’s second-largest airline plans to reach $1 billion in revenue from aircraft repairs, almost doubling 2009’s total, and the same amount in cargo sales, a 27 percent increase, two executives said in interviews.
Delta is taking advantage of the broader network created by its 2008 purchase of Northwest Airlines Corp., which allowed it to charge more for cargo. The deal also gave Delta expertise in working on Airbus jets, not just Boeing planes, to help it expand in its maintenance business as U.S. rivals pull back. “It’s free money, and a smart way for Delta to take advantage of its natural strengths after the merger,” said Michael Dirchen, a CRT Capital Group LLC analyst in Stamford, Connecticut, who recommends buying the shares.

Adding cargo and maintenance sales would help Chief Executive Officer Richard Anderson narrow the gap with United Continental Holdings Inc. the company that displaced Delta as the world’s largest carrier by traffic after the Oct. 1 merger of UAL Corp.’s United Airlines and Continental Airlines Inc. Delta posted $28.06 billion in 2009 revenue, compared with $28.9 billion for Continental and UAL combined. Their cargo total together would have been $902 million. Atlanta-based Delta led North American carriers in maintenance revenue in 2009 and had the U.S. industry’s biggest freight business, at $788 million, based on data compiled by Bloomberg.


Freight Forecast

Freight revenue will be $850 million to $875 million this year, said Nee lShah, the vice president in charge of Delta Cargo, who outlined the $1 billion revenue target. Anderson and President Ed Bastain view cargo as a pillar of their efforts to end two straight annual losses, Shah said.
Whether that profitability comes from cargo or passenger, they’re indifferent about that,” he said.

Shah said that even as Delta cut capacity by parking the last 10 of Northwest’s Being 747 freighters, which averaged about 30 years old, the airline was able to more than double its cargo profit margins to “well north of 50 percent” because a bigger network and improving economy helped pump up rates. A Tokyo hub acquired through the Northwest purchase lets Delta ship auto parts and electronic components by Motorola and Intel Group. between Asia and Latin America on routes neither airline had on its own, Shah said.

‘Tremendous Amount’

“I don’t only have to talk about trans-Atlantic, one lane in the Pacific and Latin America,” he said. “We talk the world, and that really gives you a tremendous amount of leverage.” That hasn’t helped the shares this year. Delta has risen 4 percent in 2010, closing at $11.83 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, to trail the 17 percent gain for the 11-carrier Bloomberg Index. The carrier also may face more competition for passengers from Southwest Airlines Co., which agreed on Sept. 27 to buy Airtran Holdings Atlanta is home to AirTran’s biggest operations.
Anderson’s strategy for expanding the maintenance, repair and overhaul business, known as MRO, diverges with steps by rivals including Continental, Southwest and USAirways Group to use contractors for much of that work. U.S. airlines outsourced about 43 percent of maintenance expenses last year, up from 31 percent a decade earlier, government data show.

Repair Revenue

Delta took in $508 million in MRO revenue in 2009, up from about $200 million just a decade earlier, said Tony Charaf, president of Delta’s TechOps unit. The business has been profitable each year since 2005, with margins now in the “high single digits to low double digits,” Charaf said. That compares with a profit margin last year of 8.3 percent for the largest airline-owned maintenance operation, Deutsche Lufthansa AG’s Technik, according to the carrier’s annual report. Technik posted 3.96 billion euros ($5.22 billion) in 2009 revenue.

The global MRO market was about $42 billion last year, according to industry publication AviTrader. Delta’s competitors include maintenance specialists such as AAR Group and Timco Aviation, planemakers Boeing and Airbus; and engine manufacturers such as GE, Charaf said Delta has won business because of its expertise, parts inventory and quick turnarounds, with overhaul time on some engines cut to as few as 20 days, less than half as long as required several years ago. Delta also performs routine maintenance and projects done while jets are parked at airport gates, such as replacing burned-out lights.

Gol, Hawaiian.

Customers include Brazil’s GOL and Hawaiian Airlines, which put a $500 million value on a multiyear contract awarded to Delta in 2009 to service Boeing and Airbus jets. “For Delta, taking that MRO work in lets them equalize their workloads instead of having peaks and valleys” around its own maintenance needs, said Marc Wilson, a former maintenance executive at AMR's American Eagle unit. Outsourcing maintenance and repairs typically costs about 15 percent more than doing the job in-house, said Wilson, who is director of safety, quality and asset management at consultant Morten Beyer & Agnew in Arlington, Virginia. The catch is that companies can only achieve the savings by investing in equipment and people, he said. Delta’s TechOps has 9,200 employees.

“It’s a wave of the future for a number of airlines that have already a substantial maintenance infrastructure,” said Hawaiian CEO Mark Dunkerly “They are all looking for ways to better use the infrastructure that they have.”



HEY SUPER FRIENDS. I HOPE EVERYONE HERE IS DOING GRRRREAT TODAY. Hopefully with all this FREE MONEY, the Delta pilots will get RESTORATION for the next contract that will be opened shortly. MONEY AND SCOPE are the two biggest issues, along with improved work rules of course.


Regardless, I hope all of you have a super duper FANTASTIC day, and if you have time, try to do something nice for someone, like helping an elderly man order a sub at Subway when he starts stammering. Just say "The old guy wants EVERYTHING." He probably does. See ya!


Bye Bye---General Lee
 
Last edited:
Hey guess all the workers will get back those cuts in pay.......I am sure that is at the top of managements list of things to do!!!!
 
Are we ever going to buy some new cargo dedicated freighters again? I'm tired of dealing with passengers.
 
Congratulations....., wish Southwest had that much money.

Hey buddy, SWA will make more eventually with the help of the merger, but in the short term they will have to dole out a lot of money to bring the AT guys up to SWA pay rates and benefits. That is what happened with the DAL/NWA merger (FNWA pilots got 30% pay raises on their hourly rates, plus better work rules, and then made more if they upgraded to a larger jet), and it will happen to you guys as well. IF you are a SWA pilot, don't expect a large wage increase, but expect a chance to bid on two new bases, ATL and MKE. Even though upgrades will take longer probably, you will still have a stronger company, which is GRRRREAT!

Regardless, I hope you have a FANTASTIC DAY, and if you have time, try to do something nice for someone or something, like pouring Evian ontop of a smelly homeless guy. Sure, it is expensive water, but that guy deserves a shower with GOOD water. We all do. See ya!


Bye Bye---General Lee
 

Latest resources

Back
Top