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Airlines in Crisis: From Bad to Worse
The airlines suffered one of the new war's biggest blows; $15 billion
won't begin to fix it.
By Shawn Tully
Although
Jerry Greenwald isn't CEO of anything right now, he is better placed than anyone
to judge the government's $15
billion bailout of the airline industry. In the late 1990s Greenwald ran United
Airlines; before that he was vice chairman of Chrysler, where he negotiated
the 1979 government rescue of his crucial but stricken company. He says it was
the government's tough love that reshaped Chrysler into a world-class, highly
profitable automaker. In exchange for $1.2 billion in loan guarantees, the government
got concessions from Chrysler, as well as warrants that it ultimately sold for
a $300 million profit. Greenwald shudders when he compares Chrysler's rescue
with the no-strings-attached airline bailout.
"The
federal government put us under tremendous pressure to create a strong operating
plan before we got the money," he says. "Every constituency kicked
in--the unions and management with pay cuts, suppliers with lower prices, banks
by rescheduling loans. The government should have required the airlines to create
a tough-minded operating plan showing how they would pay back the taxpayers'
money." Washington could yet decide to get tough. Although the airlines
are getting $5 billion in cash with virtually no restrictions, a blue-ribbon
panel that includes Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has the authority to impose
conditions on up to $10 billion in loan guarantees. Without such discipline,
worries Greenwald, the airlines could absorb the funds, fiddle instead of reform,
then file for bankruptcy. "The government risks throwing good money after
bad," he says.
Everyone
agrees that the airlines needed a quick infusion of cash. But while the industry
can rightfully blame terrorists for its descent into crisis on Sept. 11, it
can only blame itself for being so financially vulnerable on that date. This
is a business whose binge-purge cycles date back approximately to the Wright
brothers. When times are good, its captains of industry accumulate planes and
load on debt. When times are bad, they plead for antitrust relief so they can
dominate their hubs even more completely than they already do.
Since Sept.
11, times have been desperate. Many planes are flying at less than 50% of capacity.
Passengers and pilots are edgy; one pilot on a flight from New York to San Francisco
introduced himself to his passengers, told them to look at his face and listen
to his voice--and to "take out" anyone else who issued orders. David
Neeleman, the CEO of JetBlue, a discount carrier, predicts that by next summer,
traffic will be just 80% of normal. Asked if 80% would be enough to keep the
airlines in business, he said, "Oh, no. A lot of these carriers operate
at 3% margins or minus 5% margins, so they won't make it." Even with a
bailout, the weakest majors, US Airways and America West, may go bankrupt. Some
industry experts say the government might now permit United to take over US
Airways, but Michael J. Boyd, a Colorado aviation consultant, is skeptical.
"Who wants to merge the Andrea Doria with the Titanic?" he asks. "I
see every airline in trouble."
In return
for taxpayer money, the government could have required the airlines to restructure
their hubs to encourage more competition and resolve the bitter labor relations
that have plagued them--and their passengers--for years. Instead, one of the
package's few conditions says top executives must forgo raises for the next
two years, a meaningless gesture that would enable US Airways Chairman Stephen
Wolf to collect as much as $11 million a year, the amount he made last year.
The post-bailout
industry will likely be dominated by a few surviving majors saddled with more
debt and even higher costs. Ticket prices, particularly for business travelers,
seem likely to rise substantially to cover the airlines' ever-increasing labor
and interest expenses. "I fear an industry with far fewer airlines and
far higher prices," says Kevin Mitchell, head of the Business Travel Coalition,
an industry group that represents corporate travel managers. The biggest danger
is that the government will regulate prices or grant antitrust exemptions to
ensure the airlines' survival. And don't rule out more subsidies. Robert Crandall,
the former CEO of American, worries that the rescue package isn't large enough.
"At a subsequent time," he says, the airlines may need "another
infusion or more loan guarantees."
The terrorist
attacks came at the worst possible time for the airline industry, which was
flying into a full-blown economic downturn even before Sept. 11. During the
mid-1990s, the airlines had embarked on one of their most prosperous periods
in history, earning a total of $23 billion between 1995 and 2000. But--and this
demonstrates why the airlines are such a lousy business--even in that roaring
market, the industry managed a return on capital of only 8%, vs. 10% for autos
and 12% for computers.
The airlines'
returns suffered from large interest payments on a mountainous debt load--$30
billion, about equal to the industry's total equity. The carriers are also hostage
to some of the worst labor-management relations in business. Because a strike
is so devastating--a one-month walkout by pilots can wipe out a year's profits--airline
executives can effectively be held up by their powerful unions. "The consequences
of a strike in a major hub are so huge that there's no way an airline can take
one," says Delta Chairman and CEO Leo Mullin. As a result, pilots for major
carriers are some of the best-compensated employees in America.
Up, Up, and Away
High pilot
salaries are forcing up ticket prices, particularly at the major carriers.
| Airline |
No.
pilots
|
Max.
pilot salary
|
Flight-hrs/
month
(avg.)
|
All
labor as
a % of
expenses
|
Cost/
seat mile*
|
| United |
10,682
|
$290,000
|
80
|
40%
|
11
cents
|
| US Airways |
5,941
|
$279,000
|
82
|
39%
|
14
cents
|
| Delta |
10,037
|
$262,000
|
78
|
40%
|
10
cents
|
| American |
11,625
|
$206,000
|
74
|
36%
|
11
cents
|
| Continental |
5,277
|
$199,000
|
82
|
34%
|
10
cents
|
| Southwest |
3,754
|
$148,000
|
85
|
40%
|
8
cents
|
| Frontier |
330
|
$115,000
|
77
|
24%
|
n.a.
|
| JetBlue |
177
|
$96,000
|
80
|
31%
|
n.a.
|
| American Eagle |
2,700
|
$81,000
|
80
|
21%
|
n.a.
|
*Cost of
flying one seat (empty or full) one mile.
n.a. Not available.
Sources:
Air Inc.; Eclat Consulting; Back Aviation Solutions
Additional
Reporting: Jeffrey H. Birnbaum
Christine Y. Chen
John Helyar
Brian O'Reilly
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