NYTimes.com Article: United Appears Headed for Bankruptcy

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United Appears Headed for Bankruptcy

November 30, 2002
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS






Filed at 2:59 a.m. ET



CHICAGO (AP) -- Wall Street analysts say it appears all but
certain that struggling United Airlines will soon be forced
to restructure under bankruptcy-court protection as its
cash reserves dwindle.

The grim outlook -- even as management made a last-ditch
effort to rescue a cost-cutting plan -- became drastically
worse after the carrier's mechanics late Wednesday rejected
a key component of the financial recovery plan.

The plan is considered vital to United's application for a
$1.8 billion loan guarantee from the federal government.
Without the loan guarantee, United has said it would have
no choice but to file for bankruptcy.

Wall Street on Friday reacted just as grimly. Shares in
United parent UAL Corp. plunged $1.12, or 31 percent, to
close at $2.51 in heavy trading on the New York Stock
Exchange. The stock has lost 92 percent of its value since
before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

United, the world's second largest airline, has been
struggling since the attacks to reverse multimillion-dollar
losses each day. The carrier has reduced service and has
laid off 20,000 of workers in the face of a weak economy
and sharply reduced spending by business travelers.

United said Friday officials have restarted negotiations
with union leaders to try to fashion a wage-cuts package
that would be palatable to its mechanics -- the last group
resisting proposed steep reductions in wages and benefits.

But with hefty debt payments and other challenges looming,
there's almost no time left for United to find the
financial backing it needs to avoid filing for
bankruptcy-court protection from its creditors.

``The mechanics' vote makes bankruptcy virtually inevitable
for United and UAL,'' said credit analyst Philip Baggaley
of Standard & Poor's, which downgraded the company's
long-term corporate debt rating deeper into junk status.

Other airline experts concurred, and United reiterated its
intention to file for protection under Chapter 11 of the
federal bankruptcy code if it can't get mechanics to
swiftly go along with their roughly $600 million share of a
targeted $5.2 billion in companywide labor cuts over 5 1/2
years.

``We need to reach that amount that we already agreed upon
(with a coalition of union leaders) if we're going to get a
government loan guarantee,'' United spokesman Jeff Green
said.

The Machinists' union said late Friday no formal
negotiations had been held. A meeting is scheduled with
United officials Sunday to discuss the rejection of the
tentative agreement. ``We will explore options that allow
for District 141-M participation in United's out-of-court
recovery,'' said Scotty Ford, president of the mechanics'
unit.

Even if mechanics vote again quickly and opt to accept wage
cuts, as their US Airways counterparts did in reversing
course this fall, United's application for a loan guarantee
was put in jeopardy by Wednesday's vote setback. A ruling
is expected any day on the guarantee, which cash-poor
United says it needs to obtain $2 billion in private loans.


United's pilots insisted the airline still has a chance to
avoid bankruptcy and urged the federal panel to grant the
loan guarantees.

``We are convinced that the process for an out-of-court
recovery for United Airlines is not over,'' United's pilots
union said in a statement. ``We encourage all parties to
continue their hard work in solving the open issues.''

The airline faces a tough decision on whether it has
sufficient cash to make a $375 million debt payment Monday,
although under a grace period it could push that back to
Dec. 16. Its cash reserves are believed to be around $1
billion and on a pace to run out this winter.

The other impending deadline for United is Dec. 31, when
wage-cutting agreements accepted by its pilots and other
employee groups expire unless mechanics join the others in
ratifying concessions.

The effects of a bankruptcy filing likely would have a
profound impact on the airline industry.

A bankruptcy court judge is likely to slash labor and other
costs even more severely than United has proposed,
prompting cutbacks and new revenue strategies among its
competitors. United's employee stock ownership plan also
would be endangered, as would workers' remaining
investments in the 55 percent employee-owned carrier.

There is likely to be no immediate impact on passengers,
however. If it is forced to resort to a bankruptcy filing,
United has said it will continue flying its normal schedule
-- just as US Airways has been doing since its Chapter 11
filing in August.

------

On the Net:

United: http://www.united.com


http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-United-Airlines.html?ex=1039667039&ei=1&en=02c4a9e8e86e4f3f



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