NYTimes.com Article: Air France and KLM to Merge, Becoming Europe's No. 1 Airline

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Air France and KLM to Merge, Becoming Europe's No. 1 Airline

October 1, 2003
 By JOHN TAGLIABUE





PARIS, Sept. 30 - Europe's skies are changing, and KLM
Royal Dutch Airlines and Air France intend to stay ahead of
the changes. They will create the largest European airline
through the first major cross-border airline merger in
decades, their chief executives said on Tuesday.

The catalyst for the deal, they suggested, was a
fundamental change in how air transport agreements were
negotiated. The European Court of Justice ruled last
November that the European Union had the power to override
its 15 member nations' individual deals with nonmembers and
negotiate open-skies agreements that cover them all.

Talks on a new Europe-wide agreement with the United States
are to begin on Wednesday. And when 10 more countries join
the union next year, the common air-travel market will
widen further.

"It's time for the airline industry to accept this European
dimension," said Jean-Cyril Spinetta, chief executive of
Air France, who first suggested the merger to his
counterpart at KLM, Leo van Wijk, 21 months ago.

Indicating that the day of national champion "flag
carriers" was ending, Mr. van Wijk added, "All airlines
know that the structure of our industry cannot be
maintained."

Borrowing from the consumer goods industry, Mr. Spinetta
and Mr. van Wijk said at a joint news conference that their
two airlines would form a holding company to be called Air
France-KLM, but remain independently managed and preserve
their distinct identities. The company would have three
core businesses, they said - passengers, freight and
aircraft maintenance.

If the merger is approved by regulators in Europe and the
United States, Mr. Spinetta would become chief executive of
the combined company and remain head of the Air France
subsidiary; Mr. van Wijk would be his deputy at the holding
company and remain head of KLM.

For Air France, the deal crowns a seven-year comeback from
near-bankruptcy in the mid-1990's. For KLM, which has been
struggling to reverse losses by imposing job cuts, a merger
represents a quick injection of capital and a strong
partner.

For air travelers, little change is expected, at least
right away. KLM will join the SkyTeam marketing alliance
led by Air France and Delta, and its American partner,
Northwest Airlines, will probably do so as well. Schiphol
Airport in the Netherlands will remain KLM's hub, and
Charles de Gaulle Airport near Paris will remain Air
France's.

Over the long term, the merger will probably speed the
transformation of the European airline industry into
something more like that in the United States, with fewer,
larger carriers competing on more routes and restraining
fares.

Some executives and analysts said that deals like the one
on Tuesday, with its focus on long-haul routes, would spur
the growth on short-haul flights of newer discount
carriers, like Ryanair and EasyJet, adding further pressure
to hold down Europe's traditionally high air fares.

But others said Tuesday's deal seemed mostly aimed at
market dominance. "Ultimately, it is an attempt to control
the degree of competition in the market," said Keith
McMullan, joint managing director of Aviation Economics, a
London airline consulting firm.

Likewise, Ryanair issued a statement saying that big
airline combinations like that of Air France and KLM were
"essentially anticompetitive" and would probably lead to
reduced capacity and higher prices.

Under the deal, Mr. Spinetta said, Air France shareholders
would receive one share in the new holding company for each
Air France share; they will own about 81 percent of the
company. KLM shareholders will receive 11 new shares for
every 10 KLM shares, plus warrants for additional shares
that are good until early 2008. The deal values KLM at
16.74 euros a share, or 784 million euros ($913 million), a
40 percent premium over KLM's closing price on Monday.

Not surprisingly, shares in KLM rose more than 12 percent
in Amsterdam on Tuesday, while Air France shares fell 4
percent in Paris.

Philip Butterworth-Hayes, editor of Jane's Airport Review,
noted that airlines from Denmark, Sweden and Norway
successfully combined after World War II to form SAS, and
said that the merger announced on Tuesday would be
groundbreaking for the industry as well and "could lead to
major changes."

Europe these days is scattered with small national
airlines, many of them losing money or only marginally
profitable, like Iberia of Spain, Olympic Airways of
Greece, Aer Lingus of Ireland and TAP of Portugal, and
their future is uncertain. In the 1990's, Swissair tried to
stitch together a Europe-wide network by buying stakes in
such carriers, but it was blocked from taking majority
control and ultimately collapsed under the weight of their
losses, especially those of the Belgian carrier Sabena. A
reconfigured carrier, Swiss International Airlines, has
assumed some of Swissair's old role.

The Air France-KLM deal was a setback for Alitalia, a
longtime money loser, which owns 2 percent of Air France
and had been pressing to be included.

Mr. Spinetta - who held joint news conferences on Tuesday
with Mr. van Wijk at both Schiphol and Charles de Gaulle
Airports today - said that Air France and KLM had signed
new cooperation agreements with Alitalia that would, among
other things, combine all three airlines' cargo businesses.
Alitalia said it hoped to join the merger before long, but
Mr. Spinetta would not say whether or when that might
happen.

Even so, a chart of the new company's network, displayed at
the news conferences, showed Milan as a hub along with
Schiphol and de Gaulle, illustrating the challenge that the
merger poses to British Airways, which the new company
would eclipse in size, and to Lufthansa, the next largest
in Europe.

Mr. Spinetta said the new network was meant to match that
of British Airways, which is building a hub network around
London's Heathrow, Madrid (home of Iberia, one of its
closer partners), and Zurich (home of Swiss International,
which announced an alliance with British Airways last
week).

Similarly, Lufthansa has built a hub network around
Frankfurt, Munich, Copenhagen and Vienna.

Already, Mr. Spinetta said, some 54 percent of all European
long-distance air traffic is concentrated at the four
busiest airports - Heathrow, Frankfurt, Paris and Schiphol
- and that trend is expected to continue.

Air France-KLM would be the world's largest carrier by
revenue, with a combined 19.2 billion euros ($22.4 billion)
and a combined 58.8 million passengers a year. Measured by
passenger-miles, it would rank third worldwide after
American Airlines and United Airlines.

The merger would effectively end KLM's 84-year history as
an independent airline. The new shares issued to buy it
would dilute the French government's stake to 44 percent,
from 54 percent of Air France now - a concession to Dutch
sensibilities.

To protect KLM's landing rights under existing agreements,
a majority of the voting rights, though not the equity, in
the KLM subsidiary would be held for three years by the
Dutch government and two Dutch foundations, keeping it
technically Dutch. Some analysts saw the seeds of future
governance problems in the arrangement, but Mr. van Wijk
said that there was no risk and that KLM's management had
"always been driven by economic interests."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/01/business/01AIR.html?ex=1066024185&ei=1&en=77e317ff7c7e460e


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