WorldTraveler
Corn Field
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2003
- Messages
- 21,709
- Reaction score
- 10,662
Busdrvr,
The amount the ATSB has to loan UAL, if any, has to be what it takes for UAL to make it in the current business environment and doesn't have any relation to what UAL made or lost in the past. In the 2 1/2 years since 9/11, LCC's have grown dramatically and have pushed down the fares legacy airlines can expect to receive. That is why traffic for all airlines is approaching pre-9/11 levels. LCC's are carrying a much higher percentage of traffic at the fares they want to charge. Although UAL has narrowed its losses dramatically, it still cannot run a profitable operation and the attack on revenue that it is going to happen this summer will only prove that United Airlines cannot cut costs fast enough to overcome the deterioration in revenues.
Let's not forget that United Airlines and its employees have had an acrimonius relationship for much of the period since deregulation and the company was dramatically weakened by the actions of its pilots in the summer of 2000. Absent that little spat, UAL might not be in bankruptcy today. It's amazing how the troops have all been rallied now that death (or at least a dramatic downsizing) is possible; as a taxpayer, I simply do not want to bail UAL out when other carriers who managed to run their business better before 9/11 don't face the same crisis UAL does today. I'm sorry to keep bringing history up but it does very much explain why UAL Corp. is where it is today.
Given that the Wall Street Journal and USAToday (the two largest circulating newspapers in America if I am correct) believe it is time for the marketplace to sort out the winners and losers in the airline industry and not the government, the support for UAL's ATSB is shrinking by the day. The question is not whether UAL's domestic capacity can be redistributed among other carriers because there is no doubt that it can. The issue the government has to face is how to redistribute United's international system among the remaining carriers who cannot afford to buy much at the present. There is no doubt that the remaining five network carriers and probably a few of the LCC's would love to have a piece of United's network.
I suspect if UAL were denied an ATSB loan they would survive but they would have to choose what they want to get sell off to get out of bankruptcy. We could debate who would want what but AA, CO, DL, and NW have all stated in the past that they would like parts of United Airlines. UAL's creditors are most interested in looking for someone to take over their liabilities, something any of these 4 carriers are capable of doing as long as they get a decent revenue stream.
The amount the ATSB has to loan UAL, if any, has to be what it takes for UAL to make it in the current business environment and doesn't have any relation to what UAL made or lost in the past. In the 2 1/2 years since 9/11, LCC's have grown dramatically and have pushed down the fares legacy airlines can expect to receive. That is why traffic for all airlines is approaching pre-9/11 levels. LCC's are carrying a much higher percentage of traffic at the fares they want to charge. Although UAL has narrowed its losses dramatically, it still cannot run a profitable operation and the attack on revenue that it is going to happen this summer will only prove that United Airlines cannot cut costs fast enough to overcome the deterioration in revenues.
Let's not forget that United Airlines and its employees have had an acrimonius relationship for much of the period since deregulation and the company was dramatically weakened by the actions of its pilots in the summer of 2000. Absent that little spat, UAL might not be in bankruptcy today. It's amazing how the troops have all been rallied now that death (or at least a dramatic downsizing) is possible; as a taxpayer, I simply do not want to bail UAL out when other carriers who managed to run their business better before 9/11 don't face the same crisis UAL does today. I'm sorry to keep bringing history up but it does very much explain why UAL Corp. is where it is today.
Given that the Wall Street Journal and USAToday (the two largest circulating newspapers in America if I am correct) believe it is time for the marketplace to sort out the winners and losers in the airline industry and not the government, the support for UAL's ATSB is shrinking by the day. The question is not whether UAL's domestic capacity can be redistributed among other carriers because there is no doubt that it can. The issue the government has to face is how to redistribute United's international system among the remaining carriers who cannot afford to buy much at the present. There is no doubt that the remaining five network carriers and probably a few of the LCC's would love to have a piece of United's network.
I suspect if UAL were denied an ATSB loan they would survive but they would have to choose what they want to get sell off to get out of bankruptcy. We could debate who would want what but AA, CO, DL, and NW have all stated in the past that they would like parts of United Airlines. UAL's creditors are most interested in looking for someone to take over their liabilities, something any of these 4 carriers are capable of doing as long as they get a decent revenue stream.