Prescription for future airline health: mergers

Wednesday, 17 Dec, 2009 0

A good case could be made for further US airline consolidation, says the CEO of Delta Airlines, the world’s largest, but there’s a question whether the Obama administration would allow it.
 

”If a transaction were to occur, economics should prevail,” said Delta CEO Richard Anderson. ”I think the case can be made ultimately, but it remains to be seen what this administration’s take will be.”
 

He did not say whether Delta has an appetite for another acquisition.
 

Rumors have flown about Delta acquiring JetBlue, among others, but no merger deals have been completed since Delta bought Northwest.
 

The airline said it projects it will end 2010 with $5.4 billion in unrestricted liquidity, up from the $5.3 billion it expects to end this year with.
 

Delta is targeting $600 million in new cost savings and productivity enhancements next year. It also plans to make a big investment next year in customer servicing training across the airline.
 

In other airline news, analysts were predicting some improvement in business travel but warned that increased fuel prices could thwart any recovery.
 

“What we stated was we are not planning for a big return of business travel next year,” said Laura Wright, Southwest’s chief financial officer and senior vice president for finance. “To put that in context: we don’t know. We don’t have a long-term view of the booking curve.”
 

She added:
 

“As we all know, the messages are really mixed on the economy, and employment numbers are still bad. “We’re assuming business travel is not just going to rebound next year. If it does come on stronger than we expected, we’ll be thrilled.”
 

As for airline prices, consumers should not be surprised to see an upturn.
 

Airline prices will have to go up to regain profitability, suggests an ITB World Travel Trend report. Specifically, the report said airlines would need to “significantly adjust their ticket prices.”
 

“Many airlines slashed prices on popular routes at the outset of the economic crisis to try to fill planes, but recent research has suggested that careful capacity management and a slow pick-up in demand has reduced the number of empty seats,” the report says.
 

By David Wilkening
 



 

profileimage

David



Most Read

Vegas’s Billion-Dollar Secrets – What They Don’t Want Tourists to Know

Visit Florida’s New CEO Bryan Griffin Shares His Vision for State Tourism with Graham

Chicago’s Tourism Renaissance: Graham Interviews Kristin Reynolds of Choose Chicago

Graham Talks with Cassandra McCauley of MMGY NextFactor About the Latest Industry Research

Destination International’s Andreas Weissenborn: Research, Advocacy, and Destination Impact

Graham and Don Welsh Discuss the Success of Destinations International’s Annual Conference

Graham and CEO Andre Kiwitz on Ventura Travel’s UK Move and Recruitment for the Role

Brett Laiken and Graham Discuss Florida’s Tourism Momentum and Global Appeal

Graham and Elliot Ferguson on Positioning DC as a Cultural and Inclusive Global Destination

Graham Talks to Fraser Last About His England-to-Ireland Trek for Mental Health Awareness

Kathy Nelson Tells Graham About the Honour of Hosting the World Cup and Kansas City’s Future

Graham McKenzie on Sir Richie Richardson’s Dual Passion for Golf and His Homeland, Antigua
TRAINING & COMPETITION
Skip to toolbar
Clearing CSS/JS assets' cache... Please wait until this notice disappears...
Updating... Please wait...