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#61
Line Holder
Joined: Aug 2018
Posts: 61
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#62
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 202
Likes: 0
Thats right Delta bought ASA for 1.1 billion dollars in 1999. So I guess Delta did not want to buy ASA.
Skywest was forced to buy ASA for 300 million. If Delta filed bankruptcy they would pay another 100 million which they did.
Delta needed cash for bankruptcy.
Learn your history. Check your facts. Stop posting until you do, it makes you look foolish..
701EV
Last edited by 701EV; 08-26-2018 at 02:32 PM.
#64
Banned
Joined: Jul 2018
Posts: 873
Likes: 0
Melit, do you know the history of ASA? I think not.
Thats right Delta bought ASA for 1.1 billion dollars in 1999. So I guess Delta did not want to buy ASA.
Skywest was forced to buy ASA for 300 million. If Delta filed bankruptcy they would pay another 100 million which they did.
Delta needed cash for bankruptcy.
Learn your history. Check your facts. Stop posting until you do, it makes you look foolish..
701EV
Thats right Delta bought ASA for 1.1 billion dollars in 1999. So I guess Delta did not want to buy ASA.
Skywest was forced to buy ASA for 300 million. If Delta filed bankruptcy they would pay another 100 million which they did.
Delta needed cash for bankruptcy.
Learn your history. Check your facts. Stop posting until you do, it makes you look foolish..
701EV
#66
Line Holder
Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 293
Likes: 4
From: 767 FO
If Delta needed cash they would have reduced their asking price for ComAir. What Delta needed was protection of Mecca, and the C/D gate leases in ATL which, at the time, were held be ASA. Get ASA out of the Delta umbrella and the bankruptcy court can’t touch those gates. Delta saw CVG as expendable and kept ComAir as a place for accountants to put massive losses on the books, sound familiar?
#67
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 202
Likes: 0
If Delta needed cash they would have reduced their asking price for ComAir. What Delta needed was protection of Mecca, and the C/D gate leases in ATL which, at the time, were held be ASA. Get ASA out of the Delta umbrella and the bankruptcy court can’t touch those gates. Delta saw CVG as expendable and kept ComAir as a place for accountants to put massive losses on the books, sound familiar?
They needed the cash for the cost of filing bankruptcy. Delta did not have that amount of cash on hand.
701EV
#68
Line Holder
Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 293
Likes: 4
From: 767 FO
No I don’t remember. However, you don’t ‘need cash’ to file bankruptcy. What you need is cash on hand to operate while going through the process. If that cash is not available the judge gets to sell your assets to create that cash and satisfy obligations to creditors. $400m is a lot of money for you and I, but not that much when it comes to operating expenses of the 3rd largest, at the time, airline in the world.
One of the largest, and easily moved assets was the lease on the C/D gates in ATL. Southwest and others had been trying to get into ATL for years. AirTran wanted to expand in ATL. The city was a creditor and could have easily gotten more $$ than ASA was paying for another airline to get their foot in the door. New or expanded airline would then be primed to make a direct run at Delta on their home turf. One way to guard against that was by protecting the C/D gates from the bankruptcy court.
By contrast very little of CVG traffic was by CVG locals. It was a connecting point (like MEM post merger) and therefore could be worked around and Delta would be just fine without it. They used ComAir as a place to hide losses, just like Inc. used ASA.
If they needed cash they would also have sold ComAir for $400m but it was frequently mentioned Delta’s ask was $1b for the exact same thing as ASA. The airlines were roughly the same size and composition, the major difference was the ATL gates.
One of the largest, and easily moved assets was the lease on the C/D gates in ATL. Southwest and others had been trying to get into ATL for years. AirTran wanted to expand in ATL. The city was a creditor and could have easily gotten more $$ than ASA was paying for another airline to get their foot in the door. New or expanded airline would then be primed to make a direct run at Delta on their home turf. One way to guard against that was by protecting the C/D gates from the bankruptcy court.
By contrast very little of CVG traffic was by CVG locals. It was a connecting point (like MEM post merger) and therefore could be worked around and Delta would be just fine without it. They used ComAir as a place to hide losses, just like Inc. used ASA.
If they needed cash they would also have sold ComAir for $400m but it was frequently mentioned Delta’s ask was $1b for the exact same thing as ASA. The airlines were roughly the same size and composition, the major difference was the ATL gates.
#69


