A couple of points to consider.....
USAirways has been an Airbus buyer for the past few years....and even with the A350. However, there are a few things that are a given.
The fleets don't match very well. However there are a couple of gems in the rough there. DAL has some older 767's and they have some older 757's. They have quite a few MD88's that are older as well. USAir has a lot of older 737's and some 757's that belonged to EAL. To make a merger work, there has to be synergies down the road. Fleet commonality is something to strive for but doesn't have to be a deal breaker, especially when one is still in the BK process. Fleet recapitalization can happen a lot faster and a lot more cost effectively when you can crap can the leases on airplanes at will and on the other side, when the inevitable large increases in captial that accompany an exit from BK, there invariably will be a large aircraft order. This is where USAir gets Boeing to go along with the proposal. Now perhaps DAL already has a big Boeing order ready to fly, but to get AWA/USAir to basically switch back to Boeing could push them into going along with the deal.
Route overlap is another issue. USAir couldn't make PIT/PHL work, but AWA makes PHX/LAS work. There doesn't necessarily have to be massive carve outs other than the Shuttle and perhaps a few gates at LGA, BOS, CLT,DCA, and ATL. In a merger scenario, the facility overlap sometimes makes this a moot point as consolidating facilities is part of the efficiency of a merger.
Labor is another issue. In this scenario, I would bet one of the 50 seat regionals is a goner. I couldn't tell for sure what AWAC's contract is but Comair is in BK with DAL and it would make sense that their 50 seaters go away and with a new labor agreement, perhaps some 70-90 seaters come their way. Depends on what the mainlines need to support the flying.
Congress is the last hurdle. I suspect that with DAL in BK, they will be less inclined to stop it. However, DAL is not TWA when they were bought out by AMR and even the UAL/USAir merger was a go as far as the DOJ was concerned with the carve outs.
I give it a 70-30 chance in favor of it going through.....that is unless someone else offers more.
A350
USAirways has been an Airbus buyer for the past few years....and even with the A350. However, there are a few things that are a given.
The fleets don't match very well. However there are a couple of gems in the rough there. DAL has some older 767's and they have some older 757's. They have quite a few MD88's that are older as well. USAir has a lot of older 737's and some 757's that belonged to EAL. To make a merger work, there has to be synergies down the road. Fleet commonality is something to strive for but doesn't have to be a deal breaker, especially when one is still in the BK process. Fleet recapitalization can happen a lot faster and a lot more cost effectively when you can crap can the leases on airplanes at will and on the other side, when the inevitable large increases in captial that accompany an exit from BK, there invariably will be a large aircraft order. This is where USAir gets Boeing to go along with the proposal. Now perhaps DAL already has a big Boeing order ready to fly, but to get AWA/USAir to basically switch back to Boeing could push them into going along with the deal.
Route overlap is another issue. USAir couldn't make PIT/PHL work, but AWA makes PHX/LAS work. There doesn't necessarily have to be massive carve outs other than the Shuttle and perhaps a few gates at LGA, BOS, CLT,DCA, and ATL. In a merger scenario, the facility overlap sometimes makes this a moot point as consolidating facilities is part of the efficiency of a merger.
Labor is another issue. In this scenario, I would bet one of the 50 seat regionals is a goner. I couldn't tell for sure what AWAC's contract is but Comair is in BK with DAL and it would make sense that their 50 seaters go away and with a new labor agreement, perhaps some 70-90 seaters come their way. Depends on what the mainlines need to support the flying.
Congress is the last hurdle. I suspect that with DAL in BK, they will be less inclined to stop it. However, DAL is not TWA when they were bought out by AMR and even the UAL/USAir merger was a go as far as the DOJ was concerned with the carve outs.
I give it a 70-30 chance in favor of it going through.....that is unless someone else offers more.
A350