Seggy
Well-Known Member
What would be the benefit of creating such an airline out of three, independently-successful "regional" airlines?
Stop thinking like that.
Think Wall Street and Investment Banks. A ton of money is made by mergers for them.
What would be the benefit of creating such an airline out of three, independently-successful "regional" airlines?
I actually DON'T want a Delta merger. They'd purely be buying us for Carribbean flying and slots in other airports,.
No offense, but we already fly to more places in the Caribbean than Jetblue.
..you can go ahead a scratch Alaska off this list. Our management reiterates almost daily on how they want to remain "fiercely" independent.
I do believe that your management believes that and will try to make that happen. However, Larry Kellner and Gerald Arpey were telling their troops the same thing.
Folks, I can't emphasize enough on how much Wall Street and investment banks control over the airlines. They make a ton of money with mergers. More consolidation is coming.
Seggy said:I do believe that your management believes that and will try to make that happen. However, Larry Kellner and Gerald Arpey were telling their troops the same thing.
Folks, I can't emphasize enough on how much Wall Street and investment banks control over the airlines. They make a ton of money with mergers. More consolidation is coming.
The people I've talked to recently think it's inevitable that a merger will happen, but nobody wants one. But there's lots of anticipation/speculation that the new CEO and recent stock jump are indicative of something in the works.
The people I've talked to recently think it's inevitable that a merger will happen, but nobody wants one. But there's lots of anticipation/speculation that the new CEO and recent stock jump are indicative of something in the works.
In the greater context of the market the stock is up (as are most) and did a little better than the sector last week by a few percentage points after the investor day announcements. But to speculate that a really small blip on the stock price is indicative of something other than investors being positive about greater returns is stretching it.
If these guys are worried about what's going to happen 10-20 years down the road and feel they have a grasp on the situation, they need to go buy lottery tickets. I can't even tell you what the airline industry will look like in 20 years. If cabotage rules get re-written, every airline might be a state run airline anyway. Who knows? Regulation could come back. And earthquake could break CA off the coast. Florida might split into two different states. Democrats and Republicans might agree on something. The people that feel a merger are "inevitable" are probably the same ones that check the seniority list weekly to see where they're gonna be when they retire. If they're putting that much stress on themselves, I hope they're senior to me because they'll probably medical out before I do.The sense that I've gotten is that people feel the merger is inevitable not because of the stock price, but rather because we are so very unlikely to remain independent over the next 20 years. The latest changes in management and internal structure just make people antsy.
I think that the writing is on the wall for Blue. They are essentially asking to be merged. They are curbing their aircraft orders (slowing growth and shedding expenditures), increasing their revenue through the pricing structure, losing their CEO, and generally making themselves the sweetest looking peach on the investor tree. I would be very surprised if in 5 years they still exist as they do today.
I am thinking 'JetBlue by Emirates'
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Maybe. But what would that add for us?
Does your JB CEO often come on to TV to talk about stuff? He was on a financial news channel last week.