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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 3 May 2001 15:23:31 +0000 |
Thanks Brian, Greg, Andrew and Peter for your useful comments on this topic. Greg, perusing 800 articles and coming up with the reasoned conclusions you did would put many pro analysts to shame, so you need not apologize for not being one. I was interested in your bracketed comment "(the SAAB is a reliable work horse on existing routes but they could do with 2 more, also more ATRs and focus on the shorter main trunk routes, and focus the Beech 1900s on the short provincial routes)." Now it seems to me that you are suggesting larger planes are needed. Yet back in the early Air New Zealand domestic days, did they not run Fokker Friendships (around SAAB capacity) on these routes, a plane it would seem in hindsight was too big to be economic? So I am curious at your reasoning behind this statement. Further, I am also curious about the situation with code sharing and international landing rights. Now I understand the usefulness of Air New Zealand using a star alliance partner to fly into London, rather than a half full plane of their own. But this doesn't mean they have given up their landing rights into Heathrow, London does it? Or did they never have landing rights there, was it only to Gatwick the other London Airport? But if Air New Zealand aren't actually flying any of their own planes to London, and have no future intention of doing so, just what rights is Helen Clark talking about negotiating with the British government. I guess I'm a little confused as to how this landing rights system works. Andrew, I see the point about Virgin Blue being an Australian Airline. I suppose you mean it is registered as a company in Australia. But it is still British *owned* by the Virgin Group in the UK, so in that sense it is British. And it would seem that it is the ultimate ownership, rather than where the airline company is incorporated, that is the key issue as regards trading off international landing rights. I know that Virgin Blue has nothing to do with the European operations of Virgin Atlantic. While technically correct, both airlines still both enjoy the support of the same shareholder. It is hard to imagine that Richard Branson regards them as completely separate, even though legally, they are. I don't see Singapore Airlines getting too concerned about the short term performance of Air New Zealand. In fact I would suggest it rather suits them that Air New Zealand has a couple of bad financial years. If Air NZ/Ansett don't meet certain profit targets, then no top up payments to Brierley Investments are required, thus saving SIA millions of dollars! In fact it wouldn't be beyond the bounds of possibility that two years out SIA might use their influence on Branson to engineer a merger between Ansett and Virgin Blue. Air NZ/Ansett CEO Toomey is jumping up and down about the Impulse/Qantas merger at the moment. I don't think that is going to be called off. But by getting the Australian commerce commission to officially sanction that, how could the Commerce Commission not sanction a merger between Ansett and Virgin Blue down the track? How is that for a grand conspiracy theory? And now to Peter's latest 'rave' on the subject ;-) "I cannot agree with you with Air New Zealand is currently demonstrating any reasons why they should be treated as a 'best in breed'." Well, I didn't exactly say that. I said that if you were to invest in airlines you should invest in the best ones. Unfortunately for Air NZ both Qantas and Singapore airlines (the direct competition) fall into that category! Personally I think Air New Zealand are well managed. They have to be to 'hang in there' with the competition! It seems to be a series of factors (intense competition in Australia, downturn because of the olympics, digesting the different culture of Ansett, a spike in fuel prices and the weak New Zealand dollar) any one of which they could have coped with, but when all 5 hit together, well, it hurts! I regard myself as slightly 'underweight' in Air New Zealand but won't be buying any more of them until I have a clearer picture as to how they will fund the 5 billion dollar fleet upgrade for Ansett. SNOOPY (disc: Hold AIR) --------------------------------- Message sent by Snoopy e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz on Pegasus Mail version 2.55 ---------------------------------- "You can tell me I'm wrong twice, but that still only makes me wrong once." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors http://www.netbroker.co.nz/ Trade on Credit, Low Brokerage. Join now. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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