SFGate: US Air Looks to Address Investor Concern

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Sunday, December 30, 2007 (AP)
US Air Looks to Address Investor Concern
By CHRIS KAHN, AP Business Writer


   (12-30) 21:27 PST PHOENIX, (AP) --

   US Airways Group Inc. is eager to ring in the new year after getting beat
up on Wall Street in 2007.

   Though the company consistently surpassed analysts' earnings expectation=
s,
shares for the Tempe, Ariz.-based carrier have taken a 12-month nose dive.
By December, investors saw their stock drop three-quarters in value.

   US Airways shares reached a 52-week low of $14.41 from a high of $62.50,
while the AMEX Airline Index of major carriers fell to $34.29 from a high
of $66.92.

   Surging oil prices are certainly to blame for sinking US Airways stock
along with every other airline. But the carrier also endured a regular
stream of bad news as management struggled to combine operations two years
after America West Airlines bought the former US Airways.

   In January, US Airways whiffed on a hostile bid for Delta Air Lines. Then
check-in kiosks temporarily failed in March as the company combined
reservations systems, and a spring ice storm stranded thousands of
passengers.

   The unions rebuffed management's efforts to merge staffs from the former
America West and US Airways. Meanwhile, customers ranked US Airways at the
bottom of the industry in service.

   Company officials point to a number of reasons to be optimistic in 2008.

   They've fixed a glitch-prone reservations system, and in September the
Federal Aviation Administration awarded the combined airlines a single
operating certificate. They've hired former Northwest Airlines executive
Robert Isom to smooth out the airline's operation. And as passengers
clogged airports during the busy holiday travel season, US Airways posted
its best on-time performance of the year.

   "Now is a time where we can all get together, get on the same page, get a
new play book and go forward," US Airways spokesman Phil Gee said.

   Still, if the carrier is going to have a better year in 2008, it's going
to have to deal with a number of issues that President Scott Kirby has
told analysts investors say weigh on its stock.

   Customer Service

   If its customers are any indication, US Airways has a lot of work to do.
The carrier posted a higher rate of customer complaints than any other
major carrier throughout much of the 2007. During parts of the year, US
Airways also had the worst record on mishandled baggage and late flights.

   In response, the company has added a few more minutes between flights to
help its schedule run smoothly.

   "It's something we needed to do to get the airline back on track," Gee
said.

   "If you run your operation on time, you're not going to have misconnected
bags, misconnected passengers. Everything kind of falls in line if you run
an on-time airline."

   In November, the carrier posted its best on-time performance of the year
with 81 percent of its flights arriving within 14 minutes of their posted
schedule.

   Besides operating on schedule, US Airways also is hoping to make the
in-flight experience better next year with new meals on domestic and
trans-Atlantic flights. And it's experimenting with a new seat-back
entertainment system that would allow customers to pick their own movies
to watch during the trip. The system should be ready by spring.

   The carrier also is promising to fly one of the most modern fleets in the
industry. US Airways will be busy upgrading its fleet in 2008, replacing
numerous old Boeing 737s with new Embraer 190s. By the first or second
quarter, US Airways expects to finish a $20 million upgrade of its
international Boeing 767 jets with new seats and video screens.

   Unions

   More than two years after America West bought the former US Airways, the
company has yet to combine employee contracts for pilots, flight
attendants, mechanics and fleet service workers.

   The pilots are going to be an especially difficult bunch to deal with in
2008.

   They've been fighting internally over seniority for almost a year as sta=
ff
lists from America West and US Airways were combined. In August, pilots
from the former US Airways, who are known within the company as "East"
pilots, walked out on negotiations, demanding immediate pay raises before
they come back.

   Meanwhile, another group of disgruntled East pilots is trying to form a
new union that would revise the seniority rules.

   US Airways continues to work on its employee contracts, but Gee said
ongoing delays with the pilots will naturally complicate the flight
attendants' contract because "you can't do one without the other."

   International Flights

   Investors have told US Airways executives they're worried about the
company's lack of international flights, and for good reason, Calyon
Securities analyst Ray Neidl said.

   In addition to offering customers more options, a robust international
presence helps airlines offset high domestic operations costs by allowing
them to raise prices overseas, Neidl said.

   US Airways is working on expanding its international service. To that en=
d,
the carrier is snapping up wide-body jets, and company officials said they
expect to command a fleet of 17 Airbus A330-200s by 2011.

   Kirby told analysts at a Calyon Securities conference early in December
that the airline is growing its international capacity by 15 to 20 percent
per year. "And we have more growth prospects ahead of us than most other
carriers simply because we are starting from a lower base."

   Though high oil prices will continue to dog US Airways and other carrier=
s,
Neidl said he expects US Airways to overcome its problems and have a good
performance in 2008. He's put an "Add" rating on US Airways stock.

   "I'm still looking for only an economic slowdown next year, not a
recession," he said. "If that's the case, they should be able to make
money in that type of environment, even with the oil prices staying at
high levels."

   ___

   On the Net:

   www.usairways.com ------------------------------------------------------=
----------------
Copyright 2007 AP

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