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Dow Jones Business News
UAL CFO Sees Uptick In Rev; Some Court Issues Postponed
Friday June 20, 2:55 pm ET
By Michael McHugh, Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
CHICAGO (Dow Jones)--UAL Corp.'s chief financial officer said Friday bookings have been good for the past month or so, and believes emerging from bankruptcy court protection either later this year or early next year is achievable.
Jake Brace told reporters after a short court hearing that both domestic and international bookings are improving, particularly to the Pacific region.
"There's definitely an uptick in revenue," he said.
UAL, parent of United Airlines, filed for federal bankruptcy-court protection under Chapter 11 in December. Airlines in general have seen bookings weaken in 2003 due to uncertainties over the war in Iraq and the outbreak of severe acute reparatory syndrome, or SARS. But that appears to be reversing.
Earlier in the day, UAL's lead attorney, James Spreyregen, told Judge Eugene R. Wedoff of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, that the company expects to emerge from under the court's supervision in either the fourth quarter of 2003 or first quarter of 2004. He said a draft of the company's business plan has been circulated to the company's board of directors and creditors. UAL's reorganization plan, which needs court approval, will be based on this business plan.
Brace said emerging from court protection depends on other factors, such as having exit financing in place and the resolution of other court matters, not just on the strength of bookings at the airline.
Meanwhile, a number of issues at Friday's omnibus hearing were put off until the July 18 hearing, including a motion by UAL to terminate its code sharing and marketing agreements with Great Lakes Aviation Ltd. . The two sides continue to negotiate.
The court granted a motion authorizing a number of waivers and amendments under its debtor-in-possession financing facilities, including the payment of certain fees to the DIP lenders and an amendment to the Bank One Corp. (NYSE:
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News) DIP facility. The ruling doesn't change the amounts available under the DIP loans. In December, the court approved the company's $1.2 billion DIP agreement with a number of lenders, including J.P. Morgan , Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:
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News) , Bank One and CIT Group .
Judge Wedoff also sided with the City of Chicago and dismissed a motion filed by UAL that sought to prevent the city from throwing the airline out of O'Hare International Airport for failure to pay interest on certain revenue bonds. The city has said it has no intention of doing that, and the judge said both sides are currently negotiating.
"There's no controversy requiring adjudication here," Wedoff said. "The city ought not to have to litigate a matter than can be resolved through negotiation."
The court was told that UAL and Atlantic Coast Airlines Inc. (NasdaqNM:
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News) continue negotiations over 2003 rates and claims by Atlantic Coast that it should receive higher compensation for the regional feeder services it provides UAL. Wedoff said a July 28 trial on the matter should continue as scheduled.
(Erik Ahlberg in Chicago contributed to this report)
-By Michael McHugh, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4142; michael.mchugh@dowjones.com