American shares $30m of Boeing's Max compensation with employees
January 07, 2020
American Airlines is adding at least $30 million of its compensation from Boeing for the grounding of its 737 Max aircraft to its employees' 2019 profit-sharing programme. The Dallas/Fort Worth-based airline did not disclose the total amount of the 6 January settlement with Boeing for financial damages related to the grounding of its Max jets, but it did state that the profit-sharing award is based on American's estimate of projected full-year 2019 financial damages for the Max grounding. The 2019 profit-sharing outlay will commence incremental distribution in March 2020. "We are proud to take the step of including this compensation in our 2019 profit-sharing program, even though the compensation will be received over several years," American chief executive Doug Parker states. American does not expect the compensation from Boeing to have any "material impact" on its fourth-quarter earnings. American has 24 Max jets in storage and 76 on order, Cirium fleets data shows. The airline had 16 remaining Max jets to be delivered in 2019 (12 are already built) and is scheduled to take 10 Max 8s in 2020, another 10 in 2021 and 40 Max 8 deliveries in 2024 or beyond. The airline has removed the Max from its schedule through 6 April. Speaking at a Wings Club luncheon in New York 14 November, American Airlines president Robert Isom said: "We have to get those aircraft back – when they’re safe. When we do that it will really put us on a path to producing a lot of free cash flow." At the time American estimated a $540 million full-year 2019 loss due to the grounding. The airline is continuing its conversations with Boeing about future financial damages from the ongoing grounding of its Max aircraft. Portions of any compensation from Boeing will likewise be shared with American employees.
Source: Cirium
Chinese carriers grow Japanese presence with new services
January 07, 2020
Chinese carriers are launching new Japanese services from various cities in China. Nagoya Chubu Centrair International airport says low-cost carrier Urumqi Air began flying into the city on 30 December 2019 with Boeing 737-800s, operating the Urumqi-Wuhan-Nagoya and Urumqi-Jinan-Nagoya services. Cirium schedules data shows that Urumqi Air competes with China Southern on the Wuhan-Nagoya sector, and with Shandong Airlines on the Jinan-Nagoya route. This month, compatriots Air China and China Eastern are launching new flights to Tokyo Narita International airport, while China Southern will resume the Guangzhou-Tokyo Narita route after a four-year suspension. Notably, China Eastern is be the sole operator on the Yantai-Tokyo Narita route it launched this month, the data shows. Furthermore, All Nippon Airways (ANA) flies from Tokyo Narita to Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Wuhan and Qingdao, where its daily flights dominates the market over the Chinese carriers.
Source: Cirium
Delta completes 20% investment in LATAM
January 06, 2020
Delta Air Lines has finalised its tender offer for a 20% equity stake in Chile-based LATAM Airlines Group. The Atlanta-based airline commenced the partnership 26 September with its announcement that it was investing $1.9 billion in LATAM. The 30 December completion of the tender offer to acquire a 20% stake represents a symbolic step in the linked future of the two airlines. Delta and LATAM expect to serve 435 destinations worldwide through the partnership, which is subject to regulatory approval. The two airlines early this month signed codeshare agreements for connections between the USA and Peru, Colombia and Ecuador via LATAM affiliates. The codeshares, also subject to regulatory approval, are slated for the first quarter of 2020.
Source: Cirium