General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
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Check out this article on CASM: (for you B6busdriver)
From ATWOnline.com
Capacity growth could knock legs out from under US recovery
Dateline: Wednesday November 26, 2003
Wall Street is growing increasingly concerned that US airlines will torpedo their own recovery with new capacity additions that are too aggressive.
In a report released yesterday, Credit Suisse First Boston's James Higgins worried that "an estimated 7%-8% increase in total US industry capacity, including low cost carriers, regional jets and more traditional players, will overwhelm the fragile revenue recovery underway."
Earlier in the week, JP Morgan's Jamie Baker warned that, "2004 ASMs are likely to be within 1.5% of [the] 2000 peak, despite aggregate demand still down 15%-20%. Too many seats chasing few dollars in our opinion."
Higgins sees a possible silver lining in the fact that for legacy carriers, capacity growth is coming "overwhelmingly from improving aircraft utilization," while Baker observed that not all new capacity is the same: "We're alarmed that the fastest growing component of the industry is also the most expensive, that being the 13-cent CASM product associated with regional jets."--PF
And to top that off, there was an article in Aviation Week and Space Technology last week that said that Comair's CASM was near 19 cents! Since that is combined with ASA's and Delta's---our CASM is higher. (near 10 cents combined with the others)
And from the USAToday Business section today:
" Delta is continuing its 10-year-old strategy of shifting service to its regional airlines on routes with low demand. While successful in lowering operating costs — regional airline workers are paid much less than Delta workers — critics say the high prices charged for regional jet service have capped demand in those markets and reduced the number of passengers who flow through the hubs and onto Delta's mainline flights, thereby reducing revenue, too.
Consultant Mike Boyd of the Boyd Group in Evergreen, Colo., says Delta needs to cut labor costs, use hubs better and refocus its fleet plan away from what he considers an over-reliance on regional jets."
I believe we will try to use our own aircraft more to increase utilization. The Song planes are just one example----flying 13.2 hours a day on average, versus 11 hours at mainline. Let's see if we can do that with the other fleet types. There are places that we can add more capacity without hurting ourselves too much, like Europe. Our VP of marketing said it herself---"we left money on the table last Summer." We have already seen the start of that--with new flights in May from CVG to AMS and FCO, and additional flights from ATL to MUC and LGW, and announced today---3 weekly additions from JFK to Athens (for the Olympics). Most of those routes do not have competition from the LCCs--not yet anyway.
Bye Bye--General Lee

From ATWOnline.com
Capacity growth could knock legs out from under US recovery
Dateline: Wednesday November 26, 2003
Wall Street is growing increasingly concerned that US airlines will torpedo their own recovery with new capacity additions that are too aggressive.
In a report released yesterday, Credit Suisse First Boston's James Higgins worried that "an estimated 7%-8% increase in total US industry capacity, including low cost carriers, regional jets and more traditional players, will overwhelm the fragile revenue recovery underway."
Earlier in the week, JP Morgan's Jamie Baker warned that, "2004 ASMs are likely to be within 1.5% of [the] 2000 peak, despite aggregate demand still down 15%-20%. Too many seats chasing few dollars in our opinion."
Higgins sees a possible silver lining in the fact that for legacy carriers, capacity growth is coming "overwhelmingly from improving aircraft utilization," while Baker observed that not all new capacity is the same: "We're alarmed that the fastest growing component of the industry is also the most expensive, that being the 13-cent CASM product associated with regional jets."--PF
And to top that off, there was an article in Aviation Week and Space Technology last week that said that Comair's CASM was near 19 cents! Since that is combined with ASA's and Delta's---our CASM is higher. (near 10 cents combined with the others)
And from the USAToday Business section today:
" Delta is continuing its 10-year-old strategy of shifting service to its regional airlines on routes with low demand. While successful in lowering operating costs — regional airline workers are paid much less than Delta workers — critics say the high prices charged for regional jet service have capped demand in those markets and reduced the number of passengers who flow through the hubs and onto Delta's mainline flights, thereby reducing revenue, too.
Consultant Mike Boyd of the Boyd Group in Evergreen, Colo., says Delta needs to cut labor costs, use hubs better and refocus its fleet plan away from what he considers an over-reliance on regional jets."
I believe we will try to use our own aircraft more to increase utilization. The Song planes are just one example----flying 13.2 hours a day on average, versus 11 hours at mainline. Let's see if we can do that with the other fleet types. There are places that we can add more capacity without hurting ourselves too much, like Europe. Our VP of marketing said it herself---"we left money on the table last Summer." We have already seen the start of that--with new flights in May from CVG to AMS and FCO, and additional flights from ATL to MUC and LGW, and announced today---3 weekly additions from JFK to Athens (for the Olympics). Most of those routes do not have competition from the LCCs--not yet anyway.
Bye Bye--General Lee


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