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WhiteCloud said:That's sort of correct. I was long gone before ACA became Indy. Last 10 years is ACA, AWAC, Pt. 91. I just hate seeing my friends getting jerked around in a bunch totally unnecessary ego battles between UAL and ACA management. Lots of lost jobs and careers over nothing. Ever been to one of the corporate meetings where this stuff is worked out or just heard rumors? They can both share the blame as far as I'm concerned.
Mugs said:The rapid failure of FlyI proved that the cuts and performance based operation UAL was originally seeking from ACA were absolutely necessary given the changed industry environment.
WhiteCloud said:Sure.......but UAL and ACA should have acted like adults and worked something reasonable out.....they were supposed to be business "partners".
Mugs said:One other thing regarding G4G5's theory about the timing of the exit in relation to the stock price now vs. a few months from now. As I understand it, Tilton, Brace, etc. are not getting all that stock at once. In fact, I believe it comes over the course of at least 2 years so there is some incentive for them not to cash out and leave. Instead, it is in their best interest to stick around and properly run the company. I think G4G5's speculation about a February exit based on it being best for Tilton, Brace, etc. holds no merit. If they got the stock all at once, then perhaps that argument could hold water.
G4G5 said:Andy,
You need to do a bit of research. Tilton was NEVER, NEVER, NEVER, ever going to be CEO of Chevron.
Tilton was CEO of Texaco, when Chevron bought Texaco. David O'Rilley the Chevron CEO, who is the same age as Tilton, was made the CEO and Tilton was basicly handed his walking papers.
He had nothing else. Do the research.
Andy said:Tilton was Vice Chair of Chevron for a year after the merger. As with all mergers, there can only be one CEO. Do you have any written proof that Tilton would never become CEO? While I agree it was not likely for Tilton to become CEO of Chevron, you are making assertions without any evidence.
Yes, David O'Reilly was CEO of Chevron when they purchased Texaco. Guess who is still Chevron's CEO. The proof is in the fact that the job has not come available and that the same guy is still doing the job. What proof do you have that Tilton would have gotten the job?
You also forget that Tilton, as CEO of Texaco, had quite a bit of say in the merge. If Tilton was to be shown the door, he would have been given his golden parachute upon completion of the merger. He was not; he stayed at the merged company.
Look at the timing
Tilton didn't become CEO until early 2001, he didn't even have the job for a year and the BOD showed some much faith in him that they agreed to sell the company. Where was he going UAL was not going to replace Creighton until 9/2002. The UAL job was not available, my guess is no job for him was available so he decided to stay. He lasted a year and realized that he was never going to be CEO and that the Texaco culture was gone, replaced by the Chevron folks, who purchased his company.
Or you can believe that he stayed because he thought he was going to be CEO
Have you got anything written that supports your premise that Tilton was handed his walking papers? Links to any article that would suggest this would be acceptable.
A "network unmatched by anyone else"? How is you Latin American presence, when compared to CAL or AMR? Your Northeast presence?
Skykid,
Boeingman sees it, I see it and now the PBGC sees it. Answer me this simple question, Why did the PBGC go after the pension of the UAL pilots?.....
This will force the matter to the BK court leading to liquidation. The PBCG is fully aware that they have NO LEGAL ground to do this. UAL will have to fight it or the pilots will not pass the TA. Either way the PBGC forces UAL into liquidation.
The PBCG is pissed that UAL has decided to dump the existing pilots pension on them only to agree to replace it (in the TA) with a new one.
So why did the PBGC all of a sudden decide to come after the pilots, with one day left in 2004?
It's a very clear message to every airline. Try to pass off your pension on us and we will force you into liquidation.
G4G5 said:Where was he going UAL was not going to replace Creighton until 9/2002. The UAL job was not available, my guess is no job for him was available so he decided to stay.
G4G5 said:Come on Andy, use common sence. Tilton is the same age as O'Reilly? O'Reilly is still there, he knew he had no shot. His only CEO experience was putting Texaco up for sale, Hummmmmmmmmmmmm.
Andy said:That little piece of fluff by Ben Stein is laughable; I cannot believe that he'd actually put his name to it.
Now, how do I win Ben Stein's money?
Andy said:What we need is a bunch of MBAs out there that will undercut each other's salaries for the opportunity to be CEO/CFO/COO/VP. Then we'll see top executive salaries do the same thing as pilot wages have done.
81Horse said:What we need is a bunch of corporate boardmembers who are not invertebrates. And who have some ethical values.
Andy said:It'd be like management hiring pilots from another airline to negotiate their pilot contract.
Andy said:F9 driver, G4G5's argument was that Tilton was handed his walking papers at Chevron. I called the BS flag and asked him to back it. He was unable to, so he pulled out Ben Stein's article in today's NYT.
Call me on what? I explained it to you . David O'Reilly is still Chevron's CEO and Tilton is gone.
How long after Tilton became Texaco, did the BOD decide to sell the company? Just a few months. He was a lame duck CEO, whose only experience was selling the company, with minimal CEO experience at best.
O'Reilly's Chevron bought Texaco, what happened to Tilton? Was he asked to come and help with the merger or asked to stick around for the integration? No, he was dumped, he was not asked to be COO, he was not asked to be on the BOD. They didn't even ask him to come to Houston. They gave him a Vice chairman title until they could close up the Texaco HQ in Westchester, NY. Then they sent him out to the west coast to vice chairman of Dynergy, a troubled division that was the red headed step child of Chevron. He was NOT asked to come to Houston, Chevron's HQ.
And for G4G5, stay focused on the topic at hand. Stop being distracted by shiny objects. Show me where Tilton was forced out of Chevron.
Shiny object's, time to change the water in the bong Cheech.
You say he stayed. You tell me that I should look at that as a positive. I tell you that he had nothing else. Look at merger history, if the other CEO is worth anything they give him the number two spot, or give him a position of power. He was not asked to be co-ceo or promised that .
http://www.forbes.com/finance/mktguideapps/personinfo/FromPersonIdPersonTearsheet.jhtml?passedPersonId=137723
"From October 2001 to August 2002, he served asVice Chairman of ChevronTexaco Corporation (global energy). In addition, from May 2002 to September 2002 he served as Non-Executive Chairman of Dynegy, Inc. (energy). From February to October 2001 he served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Texaco Inc. (global energy). He previously served as President of Texaco's Global Business Unit. He serves as a director of Lincoln National Corporation."
No co-ceo position, upon coming over in the acquisition he was offered Vice Chairman and the he was DEMOTED to a Non-executive position of a troubled division. After the DEMOTION, he to take his few months of CEO experience and go looking for a job.
Vice Chairman is the number 2 position at Chevron, what do you call it when you lose your vice chair position and are asked to take a NON EXECUTIVE position at a troubled division? It's not a promotion. In the business world it called getting your walking papers.
Andy,Your BS flag is flying fully erect.
G4G5 said:Andy, my point is and I will make it clear, he was NOT asked to come to Houston, Chevron HQ and be part of the new Chevron-Texaco, what does that tell you?
Andy said:Sooo, that's NOW your point? It's hard to tell; every time I rebut your 'point,' your 'point' changes, and you leave your previous 'point' undefended.
And you know that Tilton wasn't invited to Houston because ....? I haven't seen you point out anything that says he wasn't invited to Houston. Links? I didn't think so. I'm not even sure what this would prove; it would take a while to shut down Texaco's headquarters.
You have a hard time reading the facts, was Tilton every in Houston? Did he ever have anything to do with the running of the Chevron corporation? NO, so I will spell it out for you, that means he was not invited. In fact once they finished the sale of Texaco, they sent him out to the west coast (Dynergy)
The quick sale and "Shutting down Texaco,'s headquarters" now their is something that adds to the resume of a great CEO.
What have my different points been? I don't think UAL should exit CH11 now and I don't like Tilton. If I have strayed or you have not felt that then I apologize
Going back to your previous post: Look at merger history, if the other CEO is worth anything they give him the number two spot, or give him a position of power. He was not asked to be co-ceo or promised that .
Tilton shared the number two position as Vice Chairman with Matzke. Here's the press release: http://investor.chevron.com/ireye/ir_site.zhtml?ticker=tx&script=410&layout=-6&item_id=151826
Texaco was the acquired company, not Chevron. Note how almost every key position is filled with Chevron personnel, not Texaco. If this had been a merger of equals, you'd see many more Texaco executives in key positions.
This was an acquisition of a weaker company. It is typical for the weaker company to only receive a few key positions. If Tilton was to be shown the door, they would've handed him his golden parachute and sent packing.
Not necessarily the case. Look at JP Morgan Chase's acquisition of Bank One. Jimmy Dimmon (Bank One) is now Ceo. If executives are worth their weight or considered valuable they are typically invited to become part of the BOD or given a position of power within the new corporation.
Golden parachutes are only given to VALUABLE executives. Chevron obviously felt he was not Valuable. Note how the Texaco BOD did not give him a Golden Parachute, when he was CEO. This only further shows how he was a lame duck brought in just to over see the sale of the company.
Going back to your previous 'point,' does your 2002 calendar show that August 2002 precedes May 2002? And this comes from someone tell me to use 'common sence' (your spelling, not mine) and to change the water in my bong. BTW, what's a bong?![]()
Continue to spin away. I've had about enough of your running down blind alleys. I think that a lot of your posts have more holes in them than swiss cheese.
You keep saying things like, "Sep 2002 right before things got very dim and has been able to rework it into a viable company".
How much of the rebuilding do you really think he did? He took the company into CH11 and hired countless lawyers and consultants. This isn't rocket science. He has spent millions on firms that specialize in bankruptcy. The architecture is already in place for the recovery. They drive the Bus, he just follows. Once again, his leadership is less then impressive. He has less then a year under his belt at running Texaco and UAL out side of CH11.
Getting back to my points, or swiss cheese as you call it. I guess you feel that Tiltons is a good CEO and now is the right time for UAL to exit CH11. Sounds to me like you know exactly what a bong is.
skykid said:You're killing me! Not a lot of people would argue that United doesn't have the best all-around route structure of airlines that actually fly overseas. United is also very weak in Greenland, but looking at the big picture, I'd say they are coming out of Ch11 with the route structure right where they wanted it.
Here's one of my favorite posts you had about how the PBGC would pull the plug on United -
I'm sure your new analysis is just as accurate as that! Keep it coming - there is nothing wrong with wishful thinking. Hey speaking of wishful thinking, WhiteCloud only has 31 days to make good on his hope - scratch that - prediction, that United will liquidate in Feb 2006. Are you sure you don't want to back that up by a few months now, again?!?