If fuel prices continue to rise, your boys at DL will have their hands full as well. And if anything happens that causes international travel to slump on top of that, they will be hurtin right along with everyone else. Or is DL now so big and mighty that nothing can phase them? Get a life already instead of giving all of your page long theories on the airline industry. Stop crying about all of the reasons that AA shouldn't hook up with US , when it is crystal clear that you fear they will be a stronger competitor for DL.
AA by itself COULD be a viable competitor again to DL - assuming they can successfully restructure.
But the reality that you and others don't seem to want to hear is that AA is trying to restructure in the midst of an industry that is in generally fairly stable shape financially and at a time when fuel prices are soaring.... which means capacity needs to come out of the industry and out of AA in order to force fares up.
AA has yet to come up with a plan to reduce the capacity that every airline has had to do in order to restructure... and there is simply no way that AA can turn itself around without making those major route cuts.
Of course AA continues to fight labor which is central to figuring out what kind of money AA has to spend in order to run its business - and fleet costs that go with it.
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So the day when AA will be ready to become a viable competitor again is a long way off - and continued increases in fuel will push that day even further off.
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And as much as you would like to think otherwise, US is a higher cost producer right now... they are not NOW in a position to effectively compete with DL and there is no reason to think they are going to get costs out in such a way that they can be a leaner competitor.
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And that just means once again that US cannot make AA work - if AA is able to compete, it will be on the basis of what AA does.
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This whole topic highlights once again how desperate US is to pull off a merger with AA because US' future is finished if AA restructures w/o a US merger or if AA merges with anyone else.
We will see the US PR machine crank out one story after another trying to convince everyone how needed an AA-US merger will be... but it still won't change the business fundemantals which are clearly stacked against it happening.
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BTW, you might be interested in knowing that several airlines presented at JP Morgan's transportation conference including UA, WN, and DL. WN's guidance that they do not expect to be profitable came as they stated that they expect to pay $3.50 per gallon for fuel for the quarter, a 15 cent increase compared to their forecast just a couple months ago. At the same time, DL said it expects to pay $3.27 per gallon for the quarter. Remember how much WN was able to expand a couple years ago and how much competitive advantage they gained because of their fuel price advantage? Now the table has turned. No other carrier released guidance on fuel today (that I found) but DL beat the industry on fuel prices for the last quarter.
WN's business model simply does not work with these kinds of fuel prices because they are choking off demand every time they raise fares and they cannot get capacity out of markets and redeployed elsewhere fast enough to restabilize their business model.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/us-airlines-cut-capacity-profit-forecasts-2012-03-13
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At the same time, DL is generating RASM growth that is 3X the levels WN has reported and 2X what AA and UA is reporting.
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It simply cannot be underestimated the financial strength that DL has relative to the rest of the industry when they have a fuel cost advantage - on top of the fact that DL was already the low cost mainline producer among network carriers as well as WN AND is increasing revenues faster than anyone else in the industry.
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AA is trying to restructure and present a case that it can successfully compete and US is saying they can run AA better than AA can do on its own - despite the fact that AA and US both have significant financial disadvantages.
It is simply mythical to continue to think that an AA-US merger will happen against overwhelming evidence that they do not have what it takes to compete now and have no plan to gain that advantage now - and if anyone is able to gain it, it will be AA by virtue of its position in BK.
US is simply a noisy sideshow trying to convince everyone that it is important while anyone who knows a thing about financials in the airline industry knows what US really is.