WorldTraveler
Corn Field
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2003
- Messages
- 21,709
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"But then again, most of NWA's debt is unsecured."
not true. nearly all of NWA's debt except for the big payments due in 2005 is secured. UAL had a very hefty amount of unsecured debt prior to BK and much of it is likely to be wiped out, although the unsecured creditors are likely to demand equity from the restructured UAL in order to forgive UAL's unsecured debt. And that is precisely part of UAL's problem - you only have so much equity you can give in the company.
Pension payments have to be factored in and that is still a huge issue for UAL. While they have gained breathing room in 2005 and 2006, that only increases the obligations they will have in 2007 and beyond. Given that the ATSB loan is for 7 years, the ATSB still has every reason to be very concerned about pension obligations. UAL is still in the worst shape in this regard among the network carriers.
Incidentally, Delta also has a large amount of unsecured debt that is due in the next couple years and it is precisely those creditors that are very nervous about the prospect of Delta bankruptcy. Delta has indicated they want to stay out of bankruptcy but they would probably be able to dump an aweful lot of unsecured debt. In contrast to UAL, Delta and NWA do not have many leveraged leases or expensive leases which could be cut in bankruptcy. Nearly all of Delta's recent airplanes (737NGs, 777s, 764s) are owned. The point of all of this is to show that each company has different benefits they could expect from bankruptcy. Delta and NWA would probably not gain near as much as UAL will - with or without an ATSB loan.
not true. nearly all of NWA's debt except for the big payments due in 2005 is secured. UAL had a very hefty amount of unsecured debt prior to BK and much of it is likely to be wiped out, although the unsecured creditors are likely to demand equity from the restructured UAL in order to forgive UAL's unsecured debt. And that is precisely part of UAL's problem - you only have so much equity you can give in the company.
Pension payments have to be factored in and that is still a huge issue for UAL. While they have gained breathing room in 2005 and 2006, that only increases the obligations they will have in 2007 and beyond. Given that the ATSB loan is for 7 years, the ATSB still has every reason to be very concerned about pension obligations. UAL is still in the worst shape in this regard among the network carriers.
Incidentally, Delta also has a large amount of unsecured debt that is due in the next couple years and it is precisely those creditors that are very nervous about the prospect of Delta bankruptcy. Delta has indicated they want to stay out of bankruptcy but they would probably be able to dump an aweful lot of unsecured debt. In contrast to UAL, Delta and NWA do not have many leveraged leases or expensive leases which could be cut in bankruptcy. Nearly all of Delta's recent airplanes (737NGs, 777s, 764s) are owned. The point of all of this is to show that each company has different benefits they could expect from bankruptcy. Delta and NWA would probably not gain near as much as UAL will - with or without an ATSB loan.