Succeeding as in the merger going through, or succeeding as in going through and then new Delta realizing all the synergies they planned on and actually making money medium/long-term?
The former I agree has decent odds. The latter I don't see.
The Justice Department, which would scrutinize any potential merger, might also force the airline to eliminate some of its East Coast hub airports. The airline would have major operations at pairs of neighboring hubs, such as those in Charlotte and Atlanta, and New York and Philadelphia.
Antitrust lawyers said the Justice Department would focus on whether the proposed merger might diminish competition and harm consumers. Six years ago, the department seemed ready to challenge a proposed merger between US Airways and United Airlines before it fell apart.
But the emergence of low-cost carriers and Delta's struggles in bankruptcy may change the view of the department's lawyers, said Bill Bayer, an antitrust lawyer and a former head of the Federal Trade Commission's antitrust division.
"The market has obviously changed in six years," Bayer said, but questions remain about whether "it has changed to the point where the cost savings from combining these two carriers will outweigh the risks to consumers and competition."
If the airlines reach a deal, it will also probably be studied by the new Democratic Congress next year.
Rep. James L. Oberstar (D-Minn.), the ranking Democrat, and likely future chairman, on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said he would probably hold hearings on such a merger.
"A combination of carriers of this magnitude should be scrutinized in the public domain," Oberstar said.
story here