There are several reasons why, not just the stock price... First, AMR has a Very large Debt load, Second.. AMR has high labor costs... Third... AMR has a Very old Super 80 fleet that equals half of its aircraft... Fourth... AMR has obligations to take on more debt for new aircraft to replace the old ones they are retiring instead of just parking the old ones in the desert... AMR losses will likely be musch higher than all other airlines this quarter b/c of the S-80 fiasco..
Excellent answer. Unlike the Money magazine fluff piece, you explained why you think AMR will file ahead of UAUA. I don't agree with all of your conclusions, but still, excellent post.
AMR does have higher labor costs, and if fuel were still cheap, that would be a meaningful difference. But with fuel at $4/gal, the difference between AA and UA labor costs are negligible. As I posted above, AMR will still be in deep stuff (as would UA) even if labor costs were halved on June 30. Labor costs are no longer large enough to really matter.
In 2003, AA had to fix a $1.8 billion a year cash shortfall. This year, fuel may cost $3 to $4 billion more than last year, and revenue just ain't keeping up. No amount of labor concessions would fix things, not at AA nor at UA.
AMR has reduced its debt substantially in the past couple of years, so that millstone isn't as large as it used to be.
Another big difference? In the first quarter, UA had negative operating cash flow of $80 million, while AMR had positive operating cash flow of $449 million, a difference of $529 million. Dunno how cash flow looks this quarter, but if the same trend continues, AMR has more breathing room than UA.