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Merger Partner - ALL US Merger Talk Here

I for one think becoming WN would be a true blessing! For once, we would be treated as humans, the customers would be happy, and finally would be getting paid for a living!! I hope it is not just a rumor. Southwest please help us! 😀
 
I for one think becoming WN would be a true blessing! For once, we would be treated as humans, the customers would be happy, and finally would be getting paid for a living!! I hope it is not just a rumor. Southwest please help us! 😀
I'm not sure too many people want to work that much harder.
 
I for one think becoming WN would be a true blessing! For once, we would be treated as humans, the customers would be happy, and finally would be getting paid for a living!! I hope it is not just a rumor. Southwest please help us! 😀

Poor BoeingBoy would have to eat his heart out.
 
At SeekingAlpha.com:

Two deals will likely drive the unit revenue growth at most airlines between 3% and 4%, and that has (UBS Analyst) Mr. Crissey increasing his price target on most of the major U.S. airlines as the possibility of two mergers increases. He said the upside on Continental, Delta, US Airways, Northwest, and United is about 25%, which he expects could be realized when a deal is announced.
 
Delta/Northwest: Cold Feet at the Altar?
Airlines Could Stay on Own, Seek Another Carrier if Deal Falls Apart


ATLANTA (AP) -- Not too long ago, Delta Air Lines Inc. and Northwest Airlines Corp. seemed all but certain to announce a combination soon.
That still could happen in the next few days, but an impasse over seniority involving the pilots unions has jeopardized a deal, raising the question of what happens if Delta or Northwest walks away.

Industry observers say the two airlines could stay independent, seek a quick deal with another carrier or wait until next year to try the consolidation game again.

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080222/delta_northwest.html?.v=1
 
Delta/Northwest: Cold Feet at the Altar?
Airlines Could Stay on Own, Seek Another Carrier if Deal Falls Apart


Interesting quote from the article:

We're going to have consolidation one way or another," Neidl said. "Either the government will allow consolidation, or in the next recession some airlines will disappear."
 
Surely he couldn't mean this one.
This fortress of employee and customer satisfaction.
This fortress of on-time baggage delivery.
Nah couldn't be.
 
'Why Delta-Northwest won't work'

That's the headline from Fortune, where the publication's Barry Gimbel says the idea that consolidation "will solve all of the industry's woes" is far-fetched. He says a closer look at "the likely deal terms suggests this merger won't overcome the many problems facing airlines. In the end, we might just have a bigger company plagued by the same problems, including sky-high oil prices and powerful labor unions. Ditto for United and Continental if they too, as has been widely reported, tie the knot."

Gimbel notes "cost-cutting by flying the same amount of passengers on fewer airplanes" is one of the presumed benefits of pursuing a merger. "Delta, for instance, has nine daily flights between Nashville and its Atlanta hub. Northwest flies three times a day from Nashville to its Memphis hub. But the passengers often aren't going to either city; they're connecting to Los Angeles or Dallas or Boise. By merging, the combined carrier could, say, cut three flights and still meet demand," he writes.

Gimbel says that's what motivated US Airways' bid for Delta last year, with US Airways saying it could save as much as $1 billion by keeping passenger levels steady with 10 percent fewer flights on its schedule.

http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dl.../802250316/1003
 
Mergers and larger companies give more power to the unions.

US Airways has successfully carve itself in to one small mainline company and 7 or 8 express companies, where unions have NO power. Unfortionly having 9 company's fling around with the words US Airways on the plane leads to the worst service known to man, and maybe even some safety issues. Then add in all the other subcontractors that handle flights on the ground .... wow!

This industry really suxs compared the the early 80's. This is what happens to every deregulated industry. I don't know what the answer is?
 
DL-NW deal may be dead....Maybe DL will go for UA now?

Delta Says Merger Principles
With Northwest Haven't Been Met
By PAULO PRADA
February 26, 2008 4:44 p.m.

In a sign of growing trouble for a proposed merger deal with Northwest Airlines Corp., top executives of Delta Air Lines Inc. Tuesday afternoon issued an internal memo saying that no "potential transaction meets all our principles."

Summarizing the airline's priorities in any merger, including seniority protection for all its employees and keeping the airline headquartered in Atlanta, the memo said the airline will continue to focus on its "stand-alone plan" until all "these conditions are met."

Signed by Richard Anderson, Delta's chief executive, and Ed Bastian, the airline's president and chief financial officer, the memo follows a recent impasse in discussions between Delta pilots and their counterparts at Northwest. Despite progress in merger talks among the two airlines' executives and financial advisers, people familiar with the situation say leaders of the pilots groups have been unable to find common ground on an agreement that would establish a common seniority list for the pilots of a combined airline.

Without that agreement, those people said, the airlines are reluctant to merge because executives are wary of protracted labor disputes and contract negotiations that have troubled mergers in the airline industry in the past.
 
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