Will ExpressJet survive this?
#1062
Line Holder
Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 969
Likes: 17
UA is looking to drive down costs, a merger would not really do that. Every decision a mainline carrier makes over the next 3 or so years is going to be about one thing and one thing only, the bottom line.
#1063
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Aug 2019
Posts: 163
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Or UA wants to get the concessions out of XJT before they merge the two carriers.
#1064
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 2,045
Likes: 257
From: A320 FO
Mergers are conducted to combine productive assets and revenue streams, reduce competition and redundancies, and create dominance in a market.
The only productive assets in this case are human resources. They can be even more 'productive' on first year pay. At least in the economist use of the word.
A merger would benefit senior pilots who might have the courage to resist being abused. Killing a carrier on the other hand scares everyone back into line.
Last edited by tallpilot; 07-24-2020 at 03:21 AM.
#1066
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2019
Posts: 472
Likes: 0
UA should want both to survive. If it kills one then the remainder has a monopoly in the market. This is all just a game to drive down prices 'oh you bettee be cheaper than c5.' (Vice versa)......
Suppose either goes down....then two.months later there is no competition; this allows the surviving organisation to drive the contract back up. It just doesn't make sence.
Suppose either goes down....then two.months later there is no competition; this allows the surviving organisation to drive the contract back up. It just doesn't make sence.
#1068
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 2,045
Likes: 257
From: A320 FO
UA should want both to survive. If it kills one then the remainder has a monopoly in the market. This is all just a game to drive down prices 'oh you bettee be cheaper than c5.' (Vice versa)......
Suppose either goes down....then two.months later there is no competition; this allows the surviving organisation to drive the contract back up. It just doesn't make sence.
Suppose either goes down....then two.months later there is no competition; this allows the surviving organisation to drive the contract back up. It just doesn't make sence.
United doesn’t care about a monopoly 145 operator because the airframe is going away. They’ll use it as a cheap stopgap for a year or two until demand comes back and they have time to figure out the rest of the fleet plan. Whoever ‘wins’ this ludicrous cage match is only delaying the inevitable for a few years before they too get the TSA treatment.
The work groups will have no leverage to negotiate pay increases while the company is getting 500 resumes per hour and filling new hire classes with as many bodies as they wish. The current CPAs are interim month to month extensions. The ‘permanent’ one will have a 2-3 year duration at barely break even reimbursement rates.
Further speculation:
Jeff Bezos is watching this and learning. These same delightful tactics will be coming to the ACMI world sooner or later. The groundwork is already being laid.
#1069
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