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CaptCoolHand 07-25-2019 05:09 AM


Originally Posted by Softpayman (Post 2858917)
SWA pulling out of EWR, getting their NY ducks in order prior to JB acquisition?

I’ve been waiting years to fly to Branson and Harlingen!

Well I was thinking about bidding back to the right seat anyways. 🥴

Softpayman 07-25-2019 05:19 AM


Originally Posted by CaptCoolHand (Post 2858922)
Well I was thinking about bidding back to the right seat anyways. ��

Don’t worry, SWAPA will handle that for you...for about 15 years.

Anyone know if there’s a 1-2-3 rule at the Lubbock layover?

ESQ702 07-25-2019 05:49 AM


Originally Posted by Softpayman (Post 2858928)
Don’t worry, SWAPA will handle that for you...for about 15 years.

Anyone know if there’s a 1-2-3 rule at the Lubbock layover?

Ok, I’ll bite, what’s the “1-2-3 rule” ?

CaptCoolHand 07-25-2019 06:32 AM


Originally Posted by ESQ702 (Post 2858943)
Ok, I’ll bite, what’s the “1-2-3 rule” ?

How old are you!?

Rabid Seagull 07-25-2019 06:40 AM

3-2-1, I prefer to start at the other end of the spectrum.

SWA getting out of EWR, so they can score during our divestiture. Why do you think we're changing to IAH? Makes it look like we're giving up something:D

Bluedriver 07-25-2019 06:59 AM


Originally Posted by Softpayman (Post 2858917)
SWA pulling out of EWR, getting their NY ducks in order prior to JB acquisition?

I’ve been waiting years to fly to Branson and Harlingen!

It was my first thought (fear), but honestly SWA is so small in NYC that they would NEVER have to do that to get regulators to approve it.

docav8tor 07-25-2019 08:05 AM


Originally Posted by Softpayman (Post 2858917)
SWA pulling out of EWR, getting their NY ducks in order prior to JB acquisition?

I’ve been waiting years to fly to Branson and Harlingen!

It would make my life easier.

Softpayman 07-25-2019 08:07 AM


Originally Posted by Bluedriver (Post 2858977)
It was my first thought (fear), but honestly SWA is so small in NYC that they would NEVER have to do that to get regulators to approve it.

Probably right.

docav8tor 07-25-2019 08:28 AM

United Airlines President: Leaving JFK...
 
By moving JetBlue to IAH gives them access to JFK. They may have to divest some BOS since United and Continental merged. I personally believe the move to IAH was more for United, but pray I'm wrong that it gives SWA something to work with.


https://skift.com/2017/04/21/united-...rong-decision/

United Airlines President: Leaving New York’s JFK ‘Was the Wrong DecisionBrian Sumers, Skift - Apr 21, 2017 12:30 am

In October 2015, United Airlines pulled out of New York JFK, moving all its flights from San Francisco and Los Angeles to Newark, where it has a hub. United’s public relations staff , promising “significant benefits” and an overall “overall higher-quality experience” for flyers.

But a year and a half later, United’s new president, Scott Kirby, says moving the flights from JFK was a mistake. Many of United’s most lucrative West Coast customers, he said, want to fly into New York City and not New Jersey. And United lost some of them when it switched the flights to Newark, Kirby told employees at a recent town hall meeting in Newark.

“I wish I could roll back the clock and change the decision,” Kirby said, according a recording of the event. “It was the wrong decision.”

At the time, United’s management team — led by former CEO Jeff Smisek – argued the carrier had no choice. The airline claimed it had lost money on the two routes for seven years, and it was having trouble competing with four other carriers flying the same routes with similar business class and economy products — JetBlue Airways, American Airlines, Virgin America and Delta Air Lines. United’s lease at JFK was also expiring, so executives said the timing was right.

Kirby, who until August 2016 was American’s president, said American’s team was pleased when United left.

“You can probably personally blame me, at least to some degree, for the fact that United pulled out,” he said. “When I was at American Airlines, we were consciously trying to push United out of JFK. That was our goal.”

In his response to the employee at the town hall meeting, Kirby suggested United executives did not think strategically before dropping the JFK flights. The routes may have been unprofitable alone, but the customers on them were unusually important.

“The real reason it was a mistake was it let American Airlines in particular go win a bunch of big corporate accounts,” he said. “People like Disney and Time Warner — two big examples — are corporate accounts that had been United exclusive corporate accounts and not only flew United on the transcon [routes] but flew United from L.A. to Heathrow and all across the country.”

Many of the corporate contracts were unusual because the companies cared less about pricing than typical businesses, Kirby said. Actors, for example, usually must fly in premium cabins — regardless of whether the fare is $1,000 or $10,000.

“Those are the kind of corporate accounts [where] on-air talent has contracts that say they fly first class,” he said. “They pay first class fares — it’s completely irrelevant what the price is. … We opened the door and let American in on contracts like that.”

May not return to JFK

Still, Kirby did not tell employees United will return to JFK, and he noted many of the lucrative customers United lost might not come back if it did. Instead, he said, United will bolster its Newark hub.

“We would never get all those customers back but one of the things we are going to focus on is making Newark the best airport, the best schedule, the best everything for New York,” he said.

Kirby’s goal is to get United back to the 30 percent market share it held in New York when Continental and United merged. Today, he said, United has about 26 percent share. “That’s a big, big drop,” he said.

He said it makes sense to grow in New York, as United executives estimate their carrier is the most profitable major airline in the region — by a substantial margin. United operates a much larger hub than American and Delta at JFK, and that additional scale usually makes flights more profitable, he said.

“We have about 15 percent margins here in Newark,” he told employees. “We estimate Delta in New York has a 4 percent profit margin, even when times are good. And American is somewhere in between.

Climbto450 07-25-2019 01:26 PM


Originally Posted by luv2fly4u (Post 2857257)
Read today that DOJ is to possibly announce this week the approval of the Sprint/T-mobile merger:

https://www.bizjournals.com/kansasci...e-deal-by.html

Have also read several articles that if this were to happen that we could see one or two airline mergers announced this year.

Here is one that I most current articles I read:

https://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/...-approval.html


I know that there are tons of rumors and have scrolled through the forums about JB merging with another airline... but does anyone think that it could become a reality if this is approved?

Just curious of others thoughts.

This is why I have been birding my CSPP shares for 9 years, let’s hope it happens.


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