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Freight Dawgs Rule
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- Dec 17, 2003
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According to this article, by 2015 Delta will be half as big as it is now...but the bright side, at least we will have regional jobs to look up to.
Rough skies for big airlines
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By Alexander Coolidge
Post staff reporter
The air travel rebound that the industry has been praying for is on its way, but it will leave traditional airlines behind with diminished market share as healthier, low-cost rivals take off, a new government report predicts.
Airline passenger demand will return to pre-Sept. 11 levels in 2005, but regional carriers such as Cincinnati-based Comair Inc. and low-cost carriers such as Southwest Airlines, JetBlue and AirTran will be the beneficiaries, the Federal Aviation Administration report says.
Major carriers like Greater Cincinnati's dominant airline, Delta, have seen their collective market share slip from 83 percent of traffic to less than 77 percent, said the report. The agency predicts old-line "legacy" carriers such as Delta will see that share shrink to less than half the total domestic market by 2015.
"That's hardly a surprise," said Glenn Engel, an analyst with Goldman Sachs & Co. in New York. "It's still a very tough business."
Traffic at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, which is dominated by Delta and its subsidiary Comair, should continue to benefit from Delta's shifting more flights to Comair, said Ted Bushelman, airport spokesman. Delta reported earlier this year that, while its overall traffic shrank 3.3 percent in 2003, Comair saw a 40 percent increase in the same period.
"Delta does very well in Cincinnati with Comair," he said.
Bushelman said traffic at the airport was growing and that local officials were pursuing plans for eventual expansion.
Engel said major carriers have trapped themselves in a vicious cycle of flying fewer planes to save money. Cutting capacity brings in less money and spreads more costs over fewer active planes. It also invites low-cost competitors to expand into the majors' markets.
"Nobody's ever shrunk their way to profitability," he said.
The report came out as Southwest Airlines said it was stepping up its expansion into Philadelphia -- a highly aggressive move against US Airways, which maintains a hub there. The move prompted US Airways chief executive David Siegel to tell employees the discount carrier was "coming to kill us."
Since the end of 2000, legacy carriers have seen traffic drop nearly 15 percent, while low-cost carriers have seen traffic rise by more than 28 percent
Publication Date: 03-30-2004