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billypaul

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Se la pallina è verde, di fronte al computer
(AGI) - Tokyo, 15 set. - Air France-Klm sta negoziando un'alleanza con Japan Airlines (JAL) per sfondare in Giappone e Cina. Lo rivelano fonti vicine all'operazione, secondo le quali anche Delta e American Airlines hanno avviato colloqui con la compagnia nipponica, la piu' grossa di tutta l'Asia. Se JAL dovesse optare per Air France o Delta dovrebbe lasciare la Oneworld Alliance, che include Airways, Cathay Pacific e American.
 
Basta che liberino i bilaterali con il jap togliendo l'odiosa monodesignazione.

La deroga non basta.
 
Lo so bene.

E' un'ulteriore stilla di veleno. Ma non voglio mandare in vacca il 3d, qui si parla del possibile accordo JAL-AF.
 
Japan Airlines ha forti legami con partner Skyteam come ad esempio Alitalia, Air France, China Southern ma soprattutto Korean Air con la quale opera in codeshare su tutta la fitta rete di collegamenti tra Giappone e Corea del Sud. Un eventuale cambio d'alleanza sarebbe poco sorprendente nel caso di JAL.
 
15 Sep 2009 2:48pm

JAL cuts routes in bid to draw funds

By Robin Harding in Tokyo
Financial Times

Japan Airlines is to cut 6,800 jobs, slash its network of overseas routes and withdraw from some airports as it seeks to attract the funding it needs to repair its balance sheet.

Haruka Nishimatsu, JAL’s president, also said that the company aims to agree on a capital injection from a foreign rival by mid-October. JAL is in talks with US rivals

Delta Air Lines and American Airlines about an equity injection of about Y30bn ($328m) – and, according to reports in the local media, is also in discussions with Air France-KLM.

The restructuring plan – which JAL presented to a government-appointed panel on Tuesday – is the company’s last-ditch attempt to persuade the government, its consortium of banks, and potential investors that it can return to profit and, therefore, deserves further support.

“It’s like the end of 1944 or 1945, after the Normandy landings,” said one person connected to the talks.

The plan includes heavy cuts to JAL’s international network – 20 or 30 routes according to local media – for which demand is at its most volatile. JAL’s international and domestic routes are currently split 50:50, but the airline would now focus more on its domestic services, said a transport ministry official who attended the presentation.

JAL also intends to increase the use of smaller aircraft on some routes, and withdraw entirely from some airports.

In addition to the job cuts – 14 per cent of JAL’s workforce – the company wants to cut pay and significantly reduce its pension costs.

JAL lost Y63bn last year and a further Y99bn in the quarter from April to June. The company has about Y100bn in debt maturing in December, and will need to refinance another Y100bn by March, while shareholders’ equity had fallen to 10 per cent of total assets by the end of June.

Any capital injection from Delta or American would be conditional on the US and Japan reaching an “open skies” agreement and US antitrust immunity.

The transport ministry said that JAL would be free to chose whichever ally brought it the greatest efficiency. A deal between JAL and Delta – and JAL’s defection to the Skyteam airline alliance – would be a severe blow to American and JAL’s existing allies in the Oneworld group.

However, the costs of changing computer systems over to the Skyteam alliance could soak up much of Delta’s proposed investment, and one person close to the negotiations said it might be hard to agree such a complicated deal by the mid-October deadline.

JAL must submit a detailed restructuring plan to the ministry by the end of the month. Its future will depend heavily on who the new Democratic Party government appoints as transport minister and whether they offer further public support.
 
Japan Airlines

LEX - Financial Times

Published: September 15 2009 09:13 | Last updated: September 15 2009 12:17

A bidding war normally implies a desirable target. Yet the two largest carriers by fleet size, Delta and American Airlines, are vying for the chance to pour money into Japan Airlines, the world’s worst large operator by almost any metric you care to mention. JAL’s gross margins are about half the global peer group average; none can compete with a six-year average return on equity of minus 17 per cent. Net debt to equity was 346 per cent at the end of March, comfortably the worst in class. Management, contemplating the latest in a series of cuts to staff, hubs and wages on Tuesday, expects another net loss this year.

But however feeble the near-term returns, and however strong their competing calls on capital, this is an opportunity neither US airline dares to pass up. Injecting $300m or so would keep JAL’s borrowing lines open. An American rescuer could then exploit the imminent liberalisation of Japan’s aviation sector: after years of to-ing and fro-ing, the US and Japan are nearing an agreement on an “open-skies” policy, allowing trans-Pacific carriers to co-ordinate more tightly on prices and schedules. American and JAL, both members of the Oneworld alliance, seem natural partners. But if Delta, already a top-four operator on US-Japan routes, could tempt JAL to defect to SkyTeam, American might find itself out in the cold. Japan’s number two, ANA, belongs to the third big network, Star Alliance.

This jostling within alliances reflects a new, harsher reality for airlines. Alliances used to be jolly, non-binding support groups; JAL, for example, shares codes with SkyTeam’s Korean, China Southern, Air France and Alitalia. But as revenue protection becomes more urgent, carriers are looking to lay down long-term bets with trusted partners. Loose relationships may have to be tightened with hard equity.
 
JAL reportedly discussing partnership with Delta, American

Monday September 14, 2009

Anxious for a financial boost in the wake of a ¥99 billion ($1.08 billion) loss in its fiscal first quarter ended June 30 and an increasing debt burden, Japan Airlines launched negotiations with oneworld partner American Airlines and SkyTeam rival Delta Air Lines concerning a potentially significant investment, according to multiple sources.
On Friday, unidentified individuals told NHK television (Japan Broadcasting Corp.), Dow Jones and the Associated Press that DL is interested in investing in the struggling Japanese carrier. Delta already has a major presence in Japan thanks to Northwest Airlines' hub at Tokyo Narita, but a partnership with JAL also might offer a foothold at Haneda, which is expanding its international profile. DL has $5.4 billion in unrestricted liquidity, including $4.9 billion in cash, equivalents and short-term investments, according to AP. JAL expects to lose ¥63 billion in the fiscal year ending March 31, 2010.
Japan Civil Aviation Bureau DG Ryuhei Maeda told Bloomberg News that the Delta reports "are probably true" and that such an arrangement "is one of the ideas I have strongly recommended" to JAL. The TV network reported that DL would become JAL's largest shareholder if the deal goes through.
In its Airline Industry Weekly, Merrill Lynch said a capital injection from Delta "would likely include" a marketing arrangement that would "lead to doubts" about JAL's continued membership in oneworld. It said DL would "gain tremendously" from the arrangement. It said JAL's equity value is approximately $5.5 billion and that DL would be acquiring a stake "at a historically depressed level."
A JAL spokesperson told ATWOnline that the airline would not comment on the reports, adding that "JAL is looking at a wide range of measures, including potential tie-ups with other airlines. But thus far, no decision has been made on any." Delta declined to comment to this website.
Over the weekend it became apparent that American is one of those "other airlines." A spokesperson for parent AMR Corp. told the Associated Press, "We are in discussions at the senior executive level in Japan with JAL." Another source told the news service that the arrangement would include a joint venture that would seek antitrust immunity, similar to the one several oneworld airlines are pursuing for transatlantic services. Expanded codesharing and an investment in JAL also are under discussion.
Sources told The Wall Street Journal that AMR's negotiations with JAL have been "intensive" and that American is willing to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in the deal. The reports coincided with full-delegation open skies negotiations between the US and Japan in Washington.

by ATWOnline Staff
 
Il Sole 24 Ore di oggi parla di una possibile chiusura del volo per Milano.
Ma ancora stiamo ad ascoltare quello che dicono i giornalisti? Quelli non di settore intendo. Quando c'è una catastrofe, una tragedia, un problema si buttano a pesce... periodo d'oro questo per loro tra incidenti e crisi del settore... periodo d'oro anche per aumentare il drammatismo o sparare a destra e a manca boiate.
 
Il Sole 24 Ore di oggi parla di una possibile chiusura del volo per Milano.

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