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On 4/6/2003 10

22 PM flyhigh wrote:
Why was TWA forced in to bankruptcy?
Part of the reason was to void Karabou. This move was applauded by many throughout the financial world. To add to that benefit, it also allowed AA to get out of aircraft leases it didn''t want. For example, AA was not interested in the 717''s. They negotiated short term leases with boeing for them. Same thing with many M80''s TWA had. On top of that, TWA was paying lease rates based on their credit rating. AA, through bankruptcy, was able to lower the rates (the rates AA would pay if it files and emerges from bankruptcy). It also allowed for AA to consolodate airport gate leases and make amendments to labor contracts.
As for being opposed to a turnaround...no I''m not opposed to turning things around, growth, or profit. As I stated, however, your chances are slim to nil of doing so and slim is heading for the door. It''s a fact that only 2 carriers have turned around...are those the odds you want to work with???
You asked why not park the 80-100 aircraft now today? Well, it''s been answered, but I''ll say it again...you can''t. It simply costs too much. You''re still responsible. The problem with filing bankruptcy is that you don''t necessarily get to decide which aircraft you get to keep. AA has over 300 M80''s. In bankruptcy, leaseholders could decide to take back to the newest (least costly to AA) ones and find another airline to put them with. Does that put you or AA in a better position???
Why not get rid of the assetts Carty speaks of now instead of in bankruptcy you ask?
Well, what''s your definition of an assett? It''s a very real possibility that creditors could say that you don''t need 3 overhaul bases...matter of fact, you don''t need any. Southwest doesn''t use ''em, UA is closing one, close three and sell the ASSETTS in them! That would mean lets get rid of them there jobs (which could be abbrogated through an 1113). How''s it sounding so far?
Sorry we don''t have crystal ball readings to give you, but the path is filled of the realities of what happens in bankruptcy. Failure to heed the lessons learned from carriers past, well, that''s just foolish...
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You seem to contradict yourself here. On the one hand you say that TWAs bankruptcy was a strategic move to get out of Karabou and aircraft leases but then say that we cant get rid of aircraft because we are still responsible for them. If thats the case then bankruptcy makes sense for us too. The story about how the lessors will lease their better aircraft to other carriers does not make sense, neither does your suggestion that the airlines sell the bases and all the equipement. Who would by them? A bank maybe and lease them back to AA? Where is that powerhouse airline that is going to pick up all these airplanes and OH facilities? As for SWA not having OH, slowly but surely, the way SWA always does it they are doing more and more work in house. Maybe SWA is the airline that is going to buy those OH facilities? If thats the case then they are better off. Who would not want SWA to buy them?
Since deregulation over 120 airlines have gone out of business. So what? How big were those airlines and how much of an economic impact did they have? No airline the size of UAL or AA has ever liquidated. Like you guys have been saying, this time is different. Years ago the government used to allow airline workers to strike for better wages. Now they say we cant strike because it will hurt the economy. Well dont you think that liquidation of a carrier the size of UAL and AA will have a huge economic impact beyond the over 150,000 employees that would become unemployed? Come on this whole thing is bull. Why is UAL still going? Five months into BK and the judge still has not abrogated their agreements. Why? I say we shut the whole thing down once the first contract is abrogated and tell the government that their experiment in airline deregulation has joined that of the S&Ls, Electricity, Commercial Banks etc as a failure. We will not accept the burden of subsidizing cheap airfares with our labor.