A holiday is always a good day to market travel deals. But what about a holiday that comes not ‘but once a year’ like Christmas, but just once every four years?
09.02.2024 - 10:21 / thepointsguy.com / U.S.District / Ted Christie / William G.Young
Don't listen to the naysayers; Spirit Airlines is here to stay.
That was the message from CEO Ted Christie on Thursday as he vociferously rejected suggestions that Spirit could be on track to file for bankruptcy and perhaps even dissolve.
Want more airline-specific news? Sign up for TPG's free biweekly Aviation newsletter.
"This misguided narrative has been advanced by an assortment of pundits," Christie said at the top of the airline's fourth-quarter earnings call Thursday, during which Spirit reported a loss of $184 million for the period. "However, back in the real world, we are focused on facts."
Speculation over a possible bankruptcy emerged almost immediately following a ruling by U.S. District Judge William G. Young that blocked a merger between Spirit and JetBlue.
Under the terms of the merger, JetBlue would acquire Spirit and absorb its airplanes, employees and other assets under its own brand. The airlines are appealing the decision, although JetBlue has indicated it may seek to terminate the merger agreement.
During a November antitrust trial in Boston, JetBlue argued that it needed Spirit's aircraft and crew members in order to supercharge its growth to a size that would allow it to compete with bigger U.S. carriers. Spirit said that it was in a precarious financial position and could no longer compete effectively with its particular ultra-low-cost business model.
On Thursday, however, Christie said Spirit was making changes to its business that would put it on track to return to profitability for the first time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Liquidity is always king and we have enhanced our levels to give us the necessary flexibility to successfully close with Jet Blue or to pursue our stand-alone plans," Christie said.
Last month, Spirit completed a "sale and leaseback" of 25 aircraft, a maneuver in which it sold the airplanes to a lessor in order to raise cash and eliminate debt, and then leased them back to continue using them. The airline netted around $419 million in cash.
Over the coming months, Spirit plans to make changes to its network construction, the times of day it operates flights (peak versus off-peak), and its market and geographic concentration, Christie said.
Nevertheless, Christie said that Spirit plans to continue to aggressively appeal the decision blocking the merger.
"This case should never have been brought. It's beyond absurd for the government to claim a victory for the American consumer," Christie told investors. "In fact, it's ridiculous."
Previous mergers that the government approved have left the U.S. airline industry as an oligopoly, Christie said, with just a few larger companies at the top controlling the "vast majority of the market."
A holiday is always a good day to market travel deals. But what about a holiday that comes not ‘but once a year’ like Christmas, but just once every four years?
An announcement this week from American Airlines created widespread concern and confusion in the travel advisor community. Once again, as with the NDC fare roll-out, we have a half-baked, significant policy change released to the marketplace without fully thinking through the ramifications or fully communicating specifically how advisors would be impacted.
In what may be a last ditch effort, JetBlue Airways and Spirit Airlines have filed an appeals court brief asking that the merger between the two airlines be allowed to proceed.The brief, filed today with the Boston 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, asks that the court overturn a recent judge’s ruling that stopped the proposed $3.8 billion, according to Reuters. In the brief, the airlines argued that the merger was improperly blocked and pointed out that the same judge who ruled against the airlines joining forces also recognized that such a merger would: ”improve competition, and thus reduce prices, for the vast majority of consumers."
Baggage fees alone were worth an estimated $33.3 billion to airlines last year.
Checking a bag when flying with several U.S. airlines is, once again, getting more expensive. It’s been about five years since the major full-service U.S. carriers collectively raised checked bag fees to $30 and $40 for the first and second checked bags, respectively. Now, some airlines are back at it, making it costlier for passengers to access the plane’s cargo hold.
Alaska Airlines is making it easier to see April’s epic solar eclipse with a series of flights heading to destinations along the path of totality — and they're selling out. The specific routes, which fly to places like Mazatlán, Mexico, Texas, and Ohio, have seen a threefold increase in demand compared to previous years, Alaska Airlines shared with Travel + Leisure. And that increased demand has led to increasingly sold-out flights.
Airfares have gotten more expensive in recent years. Yet, more Americans are traveling than ever before, with over 54 million traveling abroad in 2022, per the International Trade Administration.
Travelers will have more flight options to visit Japan this summer.Announced Thursday, American Airlines will launch a new flight route between New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and Tokyo’s Haneda Airport on June 28. The new route makes American the only U.S.
Yet another major U.S. airline is raising checked bag fees.
We're less than two months into 2024, and already three U.S. airlines have raised checked bag fees. Now, the lingering question: Will more follow suit?
An Alaska Airlines passenger stabbed an off-duty law enforcement officer with an improvised weapon, an FBI agent's affidavit says.
Travelers who want to visit Tel Aviv will soon be able to, as United Airlines plans to resume the daily flight service between Israel and New York. The service was suspended in October 2023 for passengers and cargo due to the ongoing war in the region.