Splert said:If 'TED is not designed to make a profit then how is UAL going to convince the ATSB to finance a losing operation whose only chance is to destroy the competition that has lead to lower fares that benefits the American people.
United is doing relatively great and is on track to exit bankruptcy without ATSB financing. United has met or exceeded all their DIP requirements and posted solid October numbers. Here's a glimpse of how well they are doing:
UAL Reports Strong October Results, Generates $25 Million Net Income, Excluding Reorganization Expenses
$60 Million Monthly Operating Income, Positive Cash Flow of $7 Million
Per Day
Meets DIP Covenant EBITDAR for Ninth Consecutive Month
Unit Revenue Improves 9% YOY
Reiterates Position on Pension Funding
CHICAGO, Nov. 20 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- UAL Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: UALAQ), the holding company whose primary subsidiary is United Airlines, today filed its October Monthly Operating Report (MOR) with the United States Bankruptcy Court. The Company reported a net income for October of $25 million, excluding reorganization expenses of $149 million. The majority of reorganization expenses were non-cash items resulting from the rejection of aircraft as the company aligns its fleet to the market. Operating profit for the month was $60 million. This is an improvement of about $300 million compared to October one year ago. Positive cash flow during the month was $7 million per day, excluding a quarterly retroactive wage payment to International Association of Machinists members of $63 million. UAL met the requirements of its debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing for the ninth straight month.
"What these results point to is that United's restructuring has established a foundation for success -- it is back in the game, competing," said Glenn F. Tilton, chairman, president and chief executive officer. "We still have work to do, but United's steady progress shows that we are creating an airline that will be profitable and sustainable for the long term."
"Month after month, United continues to generate solid financial results," said Jake Brace, United's executive vice president and chief financial officer. "Cash flow remains strong, and we ended the month with a cash balance of $2.5 billion. UAL's systemwide passenger unit revenue was up 9% year-over-year -_ well ahead of the industry average. We met the requirements of our DIP covenants and expect to meet them for November as well."
UAL generated positive cash flow of about $206 million, excluding a quarterly retroactive wage payment to International Association of Machinists members of $63 million. UAL ended October with a cash balance of about $2.5 billion, which included $650 million in restricted cash (filing entities only). As part of its DIP financing agreements, UAL's lenders required the Company to achieve a cumulative EBITDAR (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and aircraft rent) of $46 million between December 1, 2002 and October 31, 2003.
"United employees once again delivered strong operational performance in spite of the challenges presented by the wildfires in California and the increase in load factor over last year," said Pete McDonald, executive vice president _ Operations. "Systemwide, 77 percent of United flights departed exactly on time. On-time arrivals within 14 minutes was 86.2 percent."
Separately, in response to a New York Times article from November 20, 2003, regarding pensions, Brace stated, "Some people are trying to confuse our situation. The facts are that we can fund our pension obligations on the standard, non-accelerated timetable; we intend to continue to fund our pension obligations; and we do not want to shift this burden to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) and the American taxpayer.
"The only issue we have is the significantly accelerated pension funding schedule currently mandated. United, along with many other companies, supports the efforts in Congress to modify this accelerated timeline and smooth out pension contributions in the short term. This would enable companies to protect the pension benefits of millions of American workers and retirees for the future. We are emphatically not seeking government aid or asking the government to take over our obligations."