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Oil Spike Won't Derail NWA/Delta Merger

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patrickdc9

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Posts
48
For those who still think Delta will be hiring pilots this fall.



Delta exec: Oil price spike won't derail NWA merger
By LIZ FEDOR, Star Tribune

May 29, 2008

The rapid rise in oil prices may have discouraged other airlines from
proposing mergers, but Delta Air Lines President Ed Bastian said his
carrier's merger deal with Northwest Airlines has been successfully
"pressure tested" with oil prices at more than $135 a barrel.

Long before oil hit that price last week, Bastian said Delta's executives
and board members looked at merger models that assumed oil at $135 a barrel
and higher.

"We affirmed to ourselves back then, before oil did reach these levels, that
[a merger] still made sense," Bastian told the Star Tribune.

But Bastian acknowledged that the heavier fuel-cost burdens that Delta and
Northwest are facing has prompted their executive teams to try to speed up
the financial benefits of the merger.

When the deal was unveiled in mid-April, oil was around $110 a barrel.

The two airlines' executives had estimated that it would take three years to
fully capture about $1 billion in merger synergies -- cost savings and
revenue growth.

Now, Bastian said, merger teams have been asked "to come in with a shorter
time frame towards achievement of the synergies and a higher number."
Ultimately, he expects the merger benefits to be "substantially north of $1
billion."

In the seven weeks since Delta proposed an acquisition of Northwest, no
other big mergers have been unveiled and Continental Airlines shocked a
number of industry insiders by walking away from a potential pairing with
United Airlines.

Even as United and US Airways weighed their merger options Thursday, Fitch
Ratings downgraded its debt ratings on those two carriers and raised the
specter of liquidity problems for most U.S. carriers as staggering jet-fuel
bills erode their cash balances.

Northwest CEO Doug Steenland warned employees a week ago that some experts
are predicting oil will reach $140 to $150 a barrel this year, and he
stressed that the airline industry has returned to "survival-of-the-fittest
mode."

In April, Northwest indicated that its domestic capacity would fall by 12.6
percent in the fall. But that's likely not the end to the cutting of
flights. In his message to workers, Steenland said "we will have to look at
further capacity cuts beyond what we've already announced" if oil prices
remain at high levels.

Bastian, who also serves as Delta's chief financial officer, said that
Northwest and Delta are both intent on "preserving liquidity," so they are
each aggressively managing their costs before any merger takes place.

Bastian said he previously estimated that at the end of the year the two
carriers would have about $7 billion in combined liquidity -- roughly $6
billion in cash and access to a $1 billion Delta credit revolver. In light
of higher oil prices, Bastian said he expects that figure will be "a bit
less," but added that it won't alter "the overall economic analysis for
doing the deal."

While the Department of Justice scrutinizes the merger deal, airline fares
are expected to keep climbing, the industry's capacity is projected to
shrink and some airlines may fail.

Bastian said Delta and Northwest would like to close their merger by year's
end.

Delta already had said it would cut domestic seat capacity by 10 percent
after the summer travel season. Now Bastian said more cuts are coming.
However, he said, "It will not be nearly as large as the first round that we
announced earlier this year."

3,000 take Delta buyout offer

This spring, Delta offered voluntary buyout packages to its employees with
the intent of trimming its workforce by 2,000 people.

Bastian said more than 3,000 people volunteered to take severance packages,
and management will accept those offers and reduce the workforce at a higher
rate than it anticipated just a few months ago.

While the price of fuel is the driver behind fare increases and job and
flight-capacity cuts, Delta and Northwest executives say it won't destroy
their fundamental rationale for wanting to do a merger.

"We plan to maintain all of our hubs," said Tammy Lee, Northwest's vice
president of corporate communications. "The cost of fuel will determine
whether further capacity and personnel reductions are required, not the
merger."

But the upfront costs of doing a merger are a key concern of some industry
analysts, including Philip Baggaley of Standard and Poor's. Baggaley has
noted that combining computer systems, jetliner fleets and other
merger-related expenses will be costly.

It all depends on timing

"Depending on the timing of the up-to-$1 billion one-time investment for
merger integration, and the timing of the ramp-up of merger benefits, cash
outlays could exceed benefits in the first year of the merger," Baggaley
wrote in a research report.

But Bastian said he anticipates those costs will be considerably less than
$1 billion. He also noted that several financial benefits are possible in
year one of the merger, including the combination of administrative staffs
and greater purchasing power with vendors.

In 2007, Delta had $19.2 billion in operating revenue, while Northwest's
operations generated $12.5 billion. With their combined $7 billion in
liquidity, executives at the two carriers argue that they will survive the
industry shakeout and do so without a return trip to bankruptcy court. Both
carriers filed for Chapter 11 protection in 2005 and greatly reduced their
costs.

Despite the unprecedented rise in oil prices, Delta executives recently said
they will give their nonunion workers a 3 percent pay raise on July 1.

Bastian said the employees have been running a good airline. But there's one
big reason why he said Delta can afford to pay more -- it will save about $1
billion this year because of a fuel hedging program.

Liz Fedor . 612-673-7709

© 2008 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.
 
i am thinking the next cuts he speaks of are going to be at the regionals. we shall see
 
i am thinking the next cuts he speaks of are going to be at the regionals. we shall see


LOL, keep dreaming. It will be the dinosaur DC-9 jets, before the fuel efficient RJs.

I hate to say it but they are going to furlough after the merger, but thanks for the seniority gain at XJT. Actually, I think I was senior to you, so never mind that last part. LOL
 
LOL, keep dreaming. It will be the dinosaur DC-9 jets, before the fuel efficient RJs.

I hate to say it but they are going to furlough after the merger, but thanks for the seniority gain at XJT. Actually, I think I was senior to you, so never mind that last part. LOL


Yes. And I'm pretty sure all experts agree with you that 50 seat RJ's are the most efficient aircraft operating today and they will be around for years and years to come.
 
It is not the cost, it is the hassle factor!

More people would fly if it wasn't a hassle to get through security:

Survey: Americans made 41 million fewer trips by airplane this year because of hassles

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Nearly half of American air travelers would fly more if it were easier, and more than one-fourth said they skipped at least one air trip in the past 12 months because of the hassles involved, according to an industry survey.

The Travel Industry Association, which commissioned the survey released Thursday, estimated that the 41 million forgone trips cost the travel industry $18.1 billion -- including $9.4 billion to airlines, $5.6 billion to hotels and $3.1 billion -- and it cost federal, state and local authorities $4.2 billion in taxes in the past 12 months.

When 28 percent of air travelers avoided an average of 1.3 trips each, that resulted in 29 million leisure trips and 12 million business trips not being taken, the researchers estimated.
The survey results did not address whether travelers chose alternate transportation to pursue any of the journeys they didn't take by plane. The association estimated overall travel industry revenue at $740 billion.

Roger Dow, president and CEO of the Washington, D.C.-based association, said the research "should be a wake-up call to America's policy leaders that the time for meaningful air system reform is now."
"The air travel crisis has hit a tipping point -- more than 100,000 travelers each day are voting with their wallets by choosing to avoid trips," Dow said in a statement.

That's a big blow to airlines, many of which are losing money as the industry struggles with soaring fuel costs. Carriers have raised fares, added fees, cut capacity and scaled back expansion plans, and some small airlines have declared bankruptcy, while Delta Air Lines Inc. and Northwest Airlines Corp. announced plans to combine in an effort to reduce costs.

In all, 44 percent of the 1,003 air travelers surveyed by phone from May 6 to May 13 said they would take more air trips each year if airport hassles could be reduced or eliminated. The survey, conducted by Peter D. Hart Research Associates Inc. and The Winston Group, had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. People who flew more than five times in the past 12 months were more likely to describe air travel as frustrating, at 52 percent, compared with 33 percent of infrequent travelers, defined as people who flew one or two round trips in 12 months, according to the survey.
 
LOL, It will be the dinosaur DC-9 jets that replace alot of the regional feed when the domestic capasity is reduced.

I hate to say it but I am a Homo. thanks for the seniority gain at XJT i might be able to hold my seat now. Actually,


Very insightful thanks. With that said You arent really worth the response but if you think you have long term career protections at XJT you have a rude awakening coming. I for one wont stoop to your level and speculate what i think will happen to your job though. Good luck. I can hold the airbus now though, with all your wisdom should i bid it? :cool:
 
Last edited:
Superpilot92:

Be careful out there if you bid the bus. It sits up high and Pocono's airplane can get lost under your windshield wiper.

:)

... and replacing a MD88 with a 737-700 is a "capcity reduction" that employs as many, if not more (based on augmented crews for long range ops) pilots at more pay.
 
Last edited:
Superpilot92:

Be careful out there if you bid the bus. It sits up high and Pocono's airplane can get lost under your windshield wiper.

:)


I am sure i wouldn't see poconopilot anyway because he/she most likely only flies on Microsoft flight sim. LMAO ;)
 
We still haven't received our first 737-700 yet (in July I believe, and 6 this year). We also will get 6 777LRs from Dec 31st to March 31st of 09. I see extra hiring most likely, and those extra cuts are probably RJs.

Bye Bye--General Lee
 

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