Murdoughnut
Well sized member
Plane Business's "Titanic Watch" resurfaced this month to cover Allegiant Airlines. I can't post the article because of the paywall, but Titanic Watch is a piece covering airlines perceived as being on a road to financial insolvency. Given the health of the industry, it hasn't resurfaced in years - until now.
The main point of the article is that the exodus of so many executives points to a looming decline in stock value (executive moves aren't always correlated with stock trends). Other takeaways ...
"Meanwhile, a number of subscribers tell us that resumes from Allegiant employees are showing up en masse at other airlines"
"You can only start up a low-cost, bare bones airline and run it for so long before 1) employees unionize; and 2) costs catch up with you as you are forced to ditch the cheap aging aircraft you started with that are now costing you an arm and a leg in maintenance and you are also forced to invest in the necessary technology a growing airline requires"
"It has never invested in technology. Time after time, we've listened to the quarterly calls when the issue of technology has come up, and it is always the same story. Too little invested too late, or money only invested when there was no longer a choice. If then."
The main point of the article is that the exodus of so many executives points to a looming decline in stock value (executive moves aren't always correlated with stock trends). Other takeaways ...
"Meanwhile, a number of subscribers tell us that resumes from Allegiant employees are showing up en masse at other airlines"
"You can only start up a low-cost, bare bones airline and run it for so long before 1) employees unionize; and 2) costs catch up with you as you are forced to ditch the cheap aging aircraft you started with that are now costing you an arm and a leg in maintenance and you are also forced to invest in the necessary technology a growing airline requires"
"It has never invested in technology. Time after time, we've listened to the quarterly calls when the issue of technology has come up, and it is always the same story. Too little invested too late, or money only invested when there was no longer a choice. If then."