SFGate: Airline combos could mean higher prices, fewer choices

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2008/04/15/national/a=
134916D08.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Tuesday, April 15, 2008 (AP)
Airline combos could mean higher prices, fewer choices
By CHRIS KAHN, AP Business Writer


   (04-15) 15:32 PDT PHOENIX, (AP) --
   Getting hitched may be the right move for Delta and Northwest. But for
beleaguered air travelers, it could usher in an era of higher fares, fewer
flights, more confusion at the airport and even more crowded planes.
   The merger could kick off a wave of airline consolidation. And while the
effects would not be immediate because the combinations could take months
to get regulatory approval, industry observers say get ready anyway for
fewer carriers in the sky.
   "It's not an industry that works," said Mark Cooper, director of research
for the Consumer Federation of America, who lobbied Congress against a bid
by US Airways for Delta last year.
   "We're now getting to the point where there are so few carriers left, and
they still can't make money," he said.
   Mergers, combined with a recent spate of airline bankruptcies, mean
passengers in many cities can expect fewer flights to choose from, and
they'll be packed even fuller than they are now.
   Greater demand for remaining seats translates into higher ticket prices.
   "There's no doubt in my mind fares are going to go up," said Rick Seaney,
chief executive of FareCompare.com, which tracks changes in airline ticket
prices. "Consumers are deluding themselves if they think that's not the
case."
   Peter Schiff, president of brokerage firm Euro Pacific Capital, said the
changes could put air travel out of reach for Americans of modest means.
   "Although many Americans have come to regard affordable air travel as a
birthright, from a global perspective it remains the province of the
wealthy," Schiff said.
   That could mean more headaches for travelers already reeling from a stri=
ng
of cancellations due to stepped-up scrutiny of safety regulations by the
Federal Aviation Administration.
   The merger announcement by Northwest Airlines Corp. and Delta Air Lines
Inc., which would create the world's largest airline, has already ignited
talks among other airlines as they seek to bulk up to combat rising fuel
prices in a slowing economy.
   Continental Airlines Inc. executives told employees Tuesday that the
airline wants to remain independent — but warned "the landscape is
changing" and said it would consider its "strategic alternatives."
   The executives did not say what they might consider, but Continental has
held talks with United Airlines in the past.
   United CEO Glenn Tilton issued his own statement to employees Tuesday in
which he called industry consolidation "one of the changes necessary" for
the industry to get to sustained profits.
   "We will participate in consolidation when and if it is the right choice
and provides the right benefits for employees, customers and
shareholders," Tilton said.
   A Continental-United pairing would create an airline even bigger than the
Delta-Northwest offspring, which will keep the Delta name if regulators
and shareholders give their blessing.
   An industry dominated by a few massive carriers would give Wall Street
what it's wanted for a long time — fewer planes in the sky. That
could allow airlines to cast off redundant or unprofitable routes, use
less fuel and keep fares high.
   But the Northwest-Delta deal could also be a rare nugget of good news for
some passengers.
   The combined carrier could give consumers in small cities access to larg=
er
airline networks, which means more travel choices, said Michael Boyd, an
airline consultant.
   "Most mergers are all about less," Boyd said. "This one could be somethi=
ng
very innovative that could end up with consumers not losing service, not
having higher fares, but having much better access to the rest of the
world."
   Joining Northwest's strong Pacific network with Delta's strong Atlantic
routes would mean travelers could cover more of the globe on a single
carrier rather than switching to an airline's partners, airline consultant
Robert Mann said.
   "That combination really opens up the east-west travel," Mann said. "It
would be a big plus."
   Both airlines also use versions of a reservation system developed by
defunct carrier TWA, Mann said. That could ease integration issues and
reduce headaches for fliers.
   Mann notes that both Northwest and Delta have close relationships with
European carrier Air France-KLM — Northwest through a joint venture
on Atlantic routes, and Delta through the SkyTeam marketing alliance. Both
also have agreements with Continental.
   Delta and Northwest said they don't plan to cut more U.S. flights beyond
what they've done separately. That decision tempered reaction to their
long-awaited combination announcement. Both companies' shares closed
lower.
   The airline industry's problems have come into sharp focus: Frontier
Airlines, ATA Airlines, Skybus Airlines and Aloha Airlines have all filed
for bankruptcy in recent weeks. Champion Air plans to shut down and MAXjet
Airways went bankrupt in December. All have cited high fuel costs and
falling demand.
   Passengers flying out of smaller airports should expect to be stung the
most by industry consolidation. Airlines that combine will reshuffle their
schedules and likely favor hub cities that are more of a destination than
a stopover.
   Ray Neidl, an airline analyst at Calyon Securities in New York, said
Northwest's hub in Memphis could be most at risk because it's relatively
close to Delta's home base in Atlanta. Delta's hub in Cincinnati might
also lose out because it is relatively near Northwest's hub in Detroit.
   Bob McAdoo, a former airline chief financial officer and analyst with
Avondale Partners, said he expects consolidation to end fire sales
advertising discount tickets.
   "With less capacity, there's going to be fewer deep discounted seats whe=
re
airlines are trying to attract customers to fill their surplus seats,"
McAdoo said.
   Still, airports that are also served by low-cost carriers like Southwest
Airlines probably will continue to keep prices low, McAdoo said.
   "The low-cost carrier is the guy who sets the prices," he said.
   ___
   AP Business Writers Dave Carpenter in Chicago and John Wilen and Adam
Schreck in New York contributed to this report.
   ___
   On the Net:
   Delta: www.delta.com
   Northwest: www.nwa.com -------------------------------------------------=
---------------------
Copyright 2008 AP

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

If you wish to unsubscribe from the AIRLINE List, please send an E-mail to:
"listserv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx".  Within the body of the text, only write the following:"SIGNOFF AIRLINE".

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]