Go Back  Airline Pilot Central Forums > Airline Pilot Forums > Major
The Leverage and The Vote. >

The Leverage and The Vote.

Search

Notices
Major Legacy, National, and LCC

The Leverage and The Vote.

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 06-15-2012 | 09:56 AM
  #1  
TheManager's Avatar
Thread Starter
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,503
Likes: 0
Default The Leverage and The Vote.

I respect everyones personal decison on this vote.

I am voting the way I am because I believe the TA lacks enough to make it viable for me, my wife and our daughters.

I also believe that we are still sitting on incredible leverage. We all have seen how Doug Parker works and I have had the experience of seeing first hand as one of his employees.

He and Richard are getting ready to lock horns.

The winner has everything to gain, and the loser everything to lose.

Want confirmation, don't take my word.

Contact our Legislative Affairs folks in ALPA. Particularly the ones actively working behind the scenes now on The Hill. Ask them in particular HOW important this latest developement with Hanada access is and how it can tip the scales forcefully either way for Delta.

Then ask again, do we have leverage? Is this the best we can do?

Those are the questions I asked myself.



Just voted.

Back from a long Delta journey combined with vacation. I decided to remain incommunicado and return to see if anything significant has been added to the debate and MEC provided info.

Apparently not.

It is my opinion that we are sitting on the largest amount of leverage in over a decade and are not utilizing it. Opportunites like this don't come along but ever decade or so either.

Ask yourselves :

1. Why does LCC need TPG now for this deal. Why do you think they brought them in? Who would be bidding against LCC with deep enough pockets that required a phone call to David Bnderman.

2. Ask yourselves when does AMR's exclusivity end in BK court. Answer: Late September. Coincidentally, they time period a second deal would likely be done if we rejected this TA

Connect all the dots. Include the current legislative ones concerning Haneda, Japnese and US governments and the picture comes clear.



US Airways, TPG weigh joint bid for American's parent: sources










US Airways passengers check in for their flights at Charlotte Douglas International Airport in Charlotte, North Carolina April 20, 2012.
Credit: Reuters/Chris Keane





By Soyoung Kim
NEW YORK | Thu May 31, 2012 12:03am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - US Airways Group (LCC.N) and private equity firm TPG Capital TPG.UL may team up to bid for American Airlines' parent, AMR Corp (AAMRQ.PK), according to people familiar with the discussions.
A partnership with TPG could boost a US Airways bid for its larger rival in several ways. It could give the carrier more financial flexibility, including the ability to pay some AMR creditors in cash. The addition of TPG, which has invested in several airlines before, could also serve as third-party validation of the proposed combination.
TPG's interest comes as US Airways, the fifth-largest U.S. airline, has secured support for a proposed deal with AMR, the third-largest, from some of the bankrupt airline's key creditors, including the largest labor unions.
The sources, however, cautioned that the discussions between US Airways and TPG are not exclusive and partnering with each other is one of many options each party is considering.
US Airways has received expressions of interest from several parties in financing a potential merger for AMR, while the private equity firm is keeping its options open and may also look at becoming AMR's financial partner under the airline's standalone restructuring plan, the sources said.
US Airways has also yet to determine if it would need to bring in a financial partner to fund a potential bid for AMR, they added.
Spokespeople for US Airways and TPG declined to comment. AMR also did not comment.
AMR'S MERGER ANALYSIS
AMR filed for bankruptcy in November, citing untenable labor costs. The company has said it needs to shed $1.25 billion in annual labor costs to become profitable.
AMR earlier shrugged off interest expressed by US Airways in a deal, saying it could consider a tie-up after it exits bankruptcy as a standalone company.
But earlier this month, under pressure from its labor unions and other creditors to consider a merger with US Airways, AMR agreed to work with its unsecured creditors committee on potential merger scenarios while it is still in bankruptcy.
People familiar with the matter have said previously that the airline wants to negotiate a merger on its own terms after emerging from bankruptcy and could set its sights on different targets, ranging from JetBlue Airways Corp (JBLU.O) to Alaska Air Group Inc (ALK.N) to US Airways.
The company aims to focus on key routes for high-value business travelers under its business plan, including routes connecting New York's JFK airport and London's Heathrow and the JFK-San Francisco network.
JetBlue could be attractive to American because of its strong presence at JFK as well as its fleet of new planes, sources have said.
American said in a statement to Reuters on Thursday: "What's best for our company, our people and our financial stakeholders, will be determined by the facts in a disciplined manner and process. And this includes whether American will choose to pursue any combination down the road."
TPG'S FLIGHT WINGS
TPG's founders, Jim Coulter and David Bonderman, launched their firm with an airline deal in 1993 when they bought Continental Airlines out of bankruptcy and turned it around. Bonderman served as the airline's chairman for 10 years.
The buyout firm went on to make lucrative investments in America West Airlines Inc and Ryanair Holdings Plc (RYA.I). But its $450 million acquisition of Midwest Air Group together with Northwest Airlines Corp in 2008 went sour. TPG later had to sell its stake for $31 million.
TPG has worked with AMR in the past, having partnered with the airline on an unsuccessful $1.1 billion offer to rescue Japan Airlines from bankruptcy in 2009. Bonderman still has the pulse of the airline industry, having served as chairman of Ryanair for 15 years.
TPG also has ties to US Airways. Rick Schifter, an airline veteran and a managing partner at TPG for 18 years, sat on the airline's board for a year before he resigned in November 2006, on the same day US Airways made a hostile bid for Delta Air Lines Inc (DAL.N). He cited "ever-increasing demands on his time at TPG" and called consolidation in the airline industry "inevitable".
(Reporting by Soyoung Kim in New York, additional reporting by Greg Roumeliotis, Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Matt Driskill)

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Your Privacy Choices