funny but you joined in along with everyone else that said that the AA/US merger would make AA the largest airline in the world.
and you attempt to justify it by arguing that AA is still #1 in Latin America but no one can ever catch with AA but you fail to note that the position AA has in the Pacific is far smaller than DL or UA and AA has subsidized it to the tune of several hundred million dollars per year.
Go right ahead and focus on cash generation because that is indeed a key metric and one where AA doesn't do near as well as you want to think they do.
see here:
"Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL ) has turned into a massive cash cow in the last few years. Since the end of the Great Recession, the airline industry has become much more stable and profitable, and Delta has been leading the way.
"Most importantly, unlike its top rivals -- American Airlines (NASDAQ: AAL ) and United Continental (NYSE: UAL ) -- Delta is keeping its capital spending in check. This will enable it to generate an average of $3 billion in annual free cash flow for the next several years.
"American Airlines has also posted strong earnings growth recently, and it may earn nearly the same pre-tax profit as Delta this year. However, American is spending tens of billions of dollars to replace dated aircraft in the next several years: roughly $5.5 billion per year through 2018.
"American Airlines is spending heavily on new aircraft, limiting free cash flow. Source: American Airlines.
"Even if American Airlines matches Delta's annual operating cash flow target of $6 billion, that would produce meager free cash flow of $500 million until American's heavy investment cycle winds down. If American is just slightly less profitable than Delta, then it could produce no free cash flow whatsoever for the next five years.
"Going forward, Delta is on pace to generate enough free cash flow that it will be able to return more than $1 billion to shareholders each year, while also setting aside plenty of money for debt reduction and pension funding. That's a record none of its competitors can match."
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/05/10/delta-air-lines-inc-is-the-cash-king-of-the-airlin.aspx
AA is using the same strategy that Parker used at US which was to produce handsome profits - based on low labor costs and while building massive debt.
You and others seem to want to forget that US had about a $2B debt payment due in the next couple years that either has to be paid off or renegotiated.
AA is generating PROFITABILITY on par with DL, but it far more heavily in debt than either DL or UA. It is easy to build profits today while growing debts that will become a key differentiator between competitors in the future.
It is no surprise that Alaska and Southwest are both hugely profitable, but also very frugal in their spending and have debt levels well below what their legacy peers have.
Several of DL's debt metrics are now approaching levels half of what new AA has - and that is AFTER AA's emergence from BK.
Further, if you have bothered to read the DOT's consumer reports, you would see that UA is running a better operation than standalone AA in terms of on-time, fewer cancelled flights, and baggage handling.
All of those reasons that customers fled UA are ending and it is AA that is now at an operational disadvantage.
and specific to this discussion, a company's ability to sustain competitive incursions into other company's strength markets is directly related to its overall financial strength. It is no surprise that WN has sustained its growth into other carrier markets based on its financial strength that has long been an advantage over its peers.