Originally Posted by
OTZeagle1
I think SK and UAL may actually play the most significant role in our independence over the next few months. SWA is tight and SK has shown himself to be super aggressive with access to significant liquidity. I think this will churn for a bit. As the legacy airlines gain visibility of Q3, hammers are likely to drop.
Originally Posted by
LonesomeSky
That's an interesting idea. No matter who makes the move, if one party is interested in merging with AS then all parties become interested. A bidding war begins. Alaska fits nicely into a lot of airlines networks: UAL, AA, SWA, and B6. It could be anyone.
Or, it could be no one. The Russia/Ukraine mess could drive record high oil prices and/or Covid could create a truly deadly variant. Or, International travel doesn't come back and the big airlines bleed indefinitely. There are many unknowns.
In aviation, whenever it seems like the tide has turned and the pilots are in a winning position, the gods send down a crushing blow, a blow harder than all previous blows. The pilot shortage is like the lost city of gold. That's why we need to lock in a great contract this time around. Who knows what will happen.
I still say it's very unlikely any of the big 3 will be involved in a merger. All that would do is give more slots to the ULCCs and help their competition. Also, the big 3 aren't exactly flush with cash, not even Delta. More likely is that they absorb their regionals when they shrink to the level that they can't get the job done any more.
I say the next wave of consolidation will be at the LCC/ULCC level. NK/F9 lit it off. Now if the others don't merge they can't compete with that. And someone is going to be left without a chair when the music stops.
SWA-AAY-SCA?
AAY-SCA?
JB-AS? AS-HA? JB-HA?
AAY-Breeze-Avelo?