WorldTraveler
Corn Field
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- Dec 5, 2003
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MIA built their new terminal because AA as the primary tenant said they wanted it and sign contracts to pay for much of the cost of the terminal. The bonds, PFCs etc are all part of the process but don't doubt for a minute that the primary tentants pay major portions of the cost of the terminal and at most US airports have pretty broad authority to approve or not approve projects that would increase their rent.Every airport that I can think of outside smaller markets pays for building terminals then pays the bonds back with user fees/PFC's/etc. So AA hasn't spent "billions of dollars on a new terminal." Over time, they'll pay their share of total airport costs, but not up front except for whatever they are responsible for, i.e. office/crew room furnishings, etc).
It's like airplanes. After all the paperwork is done and money finishes changing hands, the airline hasn't spent the cost of an airplane immediately. They either do a sale/leaseback or EETC to get most/all of their money back then make lease/EETC payments for X years.
Jim
You failed to mention that DL pulled down a hub at DFW which had over 200 mainline flights per day which yielded a maximum of 15% local market share and redeployed those assets over the Atlantic and in NYC where DL doubled its market share in a market that is worth multiples more than DFW.And people forgot DL had a hub at DFW and closed it down, had a hub in MCO and closed it down.
If they wanted to go back into DFW they dont need to buy assets from AA.
If DL buys the DFW hub from AA it is because of the local market and the strategic flows that it produces - and which they never had.
I'm not sure if DL ever called MCO a hub or not but it doesn't change that DL is still the largest network carrier in nearly every city in Florida outside of MIA - reducing MCO did nothing to hurt DL's position in FLA.
Both were about the correct redeployment of assets, which incidentally is waht AA is doing w/ their new MIA terminal