Hopeful
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I do not follow your logic on this one.
FWAA
The way I figure it the average wage expenses for the last 3 years was 1.629 billion lower.
Now consider the following.
This year the company made more than 3 billion dollars.
I am doing this from memory so here we go.
Principal reduction of over 2.3 maybe 2.7 billion dollars.
Additional 700-900 million added to the cash reserves.
Plus 200+ profit.
All this is Hard cash ,there are no accounting tricks here.
When you pay down principal you do it with real money.
Be sure to notice that I am not critisizing the decisions to pay down debt or increase cash reserves,
as I believe that these are sound bussiness decisions.
Nevertheles,irregardless of accounting rules that allow corporations to claim these type
of transactions on their books,AA could not have possibly paid dept down dept,
or"put money in the bank" unless they had the cash.
Im I wrong?
In addition the company managed to put about 3.5 billion awayin the previous
years(500 mill restricted)since we had about 1 billion just before the pay cuts.
I believe they borrowed an additional 1/2 billion or so.
The profit last year is far more meaningfull if you take into account the price of oil.
If the oil had stayed 10-15 dollars lower AA's income would have increased even more dramaticaly.
Your thoughts guys?
My thoughts?
No matter what picture you paint regarding the better financial picture of AMR, you need to look at employee concessions first as the reason for improved performance. Then you need to look at the price of oil.
The bottom line is that there is no pain being shared on the part of the executive. None whatsoever.