Dunno. Looks to me all Reed did was rehash Conley's letter and a couple of weeks-old quotes from Mike Boyd....
But the gist of the argument being made is fair. Only problem is AMR still can't afford much. Crain's Chicago came out with an article yesterday ranking UA, AA, and US as most in danger of a liquidation. At a travel conference I'm attending in SFO, one of the researchers here said AA has become the next Eastern -- employees simply don't care anymore, and they're willing to burn the place down out of spite. I think that was a little overstated, but the Crain's article isn't. AMR is in a crappy situation financially, and now that oil is back on the climb, how any airline comes up with money for raises is going to be that much tougher.
There was an article (or item or comment) some time ago, somewhere, that said the poor babies won't be getting as much as in previous years, but they'll still get a payout of some amount - it's also subject to review and increase by the Board of Directors, according to what I read.Will the PSP plan payouts happen next month? eolesen posted a chart late last year showing AMR's dismal performance against the stock of the peer group, but even before the conversion to the new forums I couldn't find it. I've looked since the conversion, and still can't find it.
one of the researchers here said AA has become the next Eastern -- employees simply don't care anymore, and they're willing to burn the place down out of spite
Since the new draft EU-US open skies 2.0 agreement will eliminate the caps on foreign ownership, changing the mix probably won't matter if the European carriers like LH and BA decide to take majority stakes in their alliance partners....
The new agreement contains no commitment to change existing statutes that limit foreign ownership in U.S. carriers and bar foreign control of U.S. carriers, DOT spokesman Bill Mosley said.
Foreign ownership in a U.S. air carrier is limited to 25 percent of the voting interest in the carrier.
From memory, AMR was sixth of seven
Since the new draft EU-US open skies 2.0 agreement will eliminate the caps on foreign ownership, changing the mix probably won't matter if the European carriers like LH and BA decide to take majority stakes in their alliance partners....
U.S., EU Sign Second-Stage Open-Skies DealIt is unlikely that Congress will rewrite ownership and control regulations anytime soon due to labor’s opposition to it, says Stifel Nicolaus analyst Hunter Keay. One reason the EU may have backed down on this issue is that anti-trust immunities may satisfy EU concerns about market access.
Crain's Chicago came out with an article yesterday ranking UA, AA, and US as most in danger of a liquidation.
I hate to rain of some peoples' parades, but there was a change in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy laws as of 31 October, 2005. These were the changes DL and NW avoided by filing shortly before. Any bankruptcy history of other airlines can only be compared to events since that date, not ten years prior to today - only 5 years.This is laughable considering in the last 10 years, despite 6 major airline bankruptcy filings, only TWA has "liquidated" through acquisition. It appears AA's only propensity toward filling would be to dissuade its unions from any serious hope of gaining lost revenue.
And how many Majors have filed and liguidated? Small airlines going bankrupt and liquidating is hardly a rare occurance, In my career Ive worked for Capitol Air, Air Florida, New York Air, Arrow Air and AirBourne Express. I never expected a lifetime career out of any of them, It was simply a matter of putting in time to get the experience the Majors required. I remember a few of the Capital Air DC-10s turning up at LGA in AA paint schemes, people werent the only things that got sucked up.Frontier, Aloha, ATA and Skybus filed in a one-month span in early 2008 and Mesa filed earlier this year. Of the five, two are still flying.