Posted on 09/14/2005 2:27:17 PM PDT by Turbopilot
Delta Air Lines filed for bankruptcy court protection from creditors Wednesday, finally conceding that it cannot reverse four years of massive losses without restructuring its finances under a judge's supervision.
The Atlanta-based airline, the nation's third-largest, said it will continue normal operations and that its entrance into Chapter 11 proceedings won't affect flight schedules. The company, which has about 25,500 locally based workers, said employees and retirees will continue to be paid.
Delta's bankruptcy judge is expected to approve a raft of initial motions to ensure continued operations.
Delta said it has obtained $1.7 billion in so-called debtor-in-possession financing, primarily from GE Commercial Finance and Morgan Stanley, to sustain operations during the reorganization.
Led for the past 20 months by chief executive Gerald Grinstein, Delta struggled mightily to craft a turnaround outside bankruptcy court. But a filing became widely expected as high fuel costs undermined the effort this summer, and the price spike after Hurricane Katrina tightened the screws.
"It was already fourth and long when Mr. Grinstein took over," airline industry consultant Michael Boyd said. "The three reasons he wasn't able to avoid bankruptcy are fuel, fuel and fuel."
Delta joins United Airlines and US Airways as the third major U.S. airline flying under bankruptcy court protection, although those carriers may soon emerge. While Delta plans business as usual, it faces an uncertain journey through a long and delicate legal process that has been a lifesaver for some companies but quicksand for others.
"Delta has every chance of coming out of Chapter 11 in a relatively short period of time," said Morton Beyer, retired chairman of industry consulting firm Morten Beyer & Agnew.
"But the bankruptcy court judge is going to have a lot to say about it, and so will labor and lenders," he added. "Delta's fate is no longer in its own hands."
Filing Chapter 11 enables Delta to suspend certain debt payments while crafting a plan for paying off creditors and operating profitably when it leaves bankruptcy court. Delta's debts have ballooned to more than $20 billion as it financed losses since early 2001.
The process could include deeper changes, however:
The airline, with a judge's approval, could pare more unprofitable flights, shedding more employees and aircraft in the process. It's already eliminated one hub and made plans to scale back another.
Delta could follow United in seeking to terminate its pension plans, now underfunded by about $5.3 billion, shifting the responsibility for payments onto the quasi-federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.
Companies often get new major stakeholders or top executives while in Chapter 11 proceedings. Grinstein, 73, has already indicated he will leave within a year or so.
Delta's current stock already shoved under $1 a share by the financial stress could become worthless.
Delta, which has among the weakest international networks of the major airlines, could also ultimately be merged with another carrier, some industry experts have suggested. US Airways hopes to emerge from Chapter 11 through such a combination with America West.
Delta filed its case in federal bankruptcy court in New York, which has experience handling major corporate bankruptcies.
In addition to first-day motions to assure operations, other early matters before the judge will include formation of committees representing different classes of creditors. The entire case is likely to take months or even years. United, for instance, is in its third year flying under Chapter 11.
Prosperity gone
While not unexpected, the filing is a huge comedown for a company long known as an Atlanta success story.
Delta was founded in Louisiana in 1924 and moved to Atlanta in 1941. For the next 50 years it was one of the industry's more successful players. It profited from rival Eastern Airlines' slow demise after deregulation and became known for well-compensated workers and the "Delta family" culture.
That culture eroded during a financial slump in the early '90s after Delta bought Pan Am's European routes and was hit with soaring fuel costs and a recession after the earlier Gulf War. But Delta recovered to post record profits in the latter half of the decade.
Delta's current slump started when the economy slowed in early 2001. It accelerated when 9/11 sent big carriers into freefall while also opening the door for rapid growth among discount competitors.
Initially, Delta was in better shape than most other big airlines, having bankrolled $2 billion from borrowings shortly after 9/11. But high costs and debt, a decline in high-fare business travel, Internet fare-shopping and the growth of discounters in key markets led to losses that tapped out Delta's credit and eroded cash reserves. By the end of this year alone, Delta faced $2 billion in debt, pension and capital obligations before Wednesday's bankruptcy filing.
The discounters, such as AirTran and Southwest, increasingly dictate pricing and have lower cost structures that allow them to make money on lower fares. Delta and other so-called "legacy" airlines have higher costs due to more complex hub operations and more senior employees with traditional pensions, among other factors.
Delta also suffered the distraction of an executive pay controversy in 2003, when it disclosed that top executives took big bonuses and set up bankruptcy-proof pension trust funds for themselves amid mounting losses. A subsequent management overhaul delayed a critical pilot pay cut deal and serious restructuring moves.
Under Grinstein, a longtime board member who became CEO in the shakeup, Delta launched a massive turnaround plan one year ago, including job and pay cuts, closure of a Dallas hub and revamped schedules at its Atlanta hub. Those moves, plus a pilot contract cuts and financing from key business partners, helped Delta avert a Chapter 11 filing last fall.
Through the first half of this year the changes had cut non-fuel costs almost 12 percent. But jet fuel costs soared unexpectedly. Delta said it expects fuel costs this year to be about $1.5 billion more than in 2004, consuming all of the savings from the pilot deal and then some.
Plenty of passengers
Delta doesn't lack passengers. Through the first six months of 2005, traffic was up 7 percent and revenue up 4.6 percent vs. 2004. But costs rose 9.8 percent, led by a 53 percent jump in the average price per gallon of jet fuel. Delta posted net losses of $1.45 billion for the first half of the year, or about $1 billion excluding special items such as restructuring charges.
Chapter 11 filing gives the airline powerful leverage to seek lower payments to shed billions in debt and pension obligations and, with a judge's approval, make further cost-saving internal changes.
Last month, Tejas Securities analyst Robert Halder estimated that almost $7 billion of Delta's debt is unsecured. In the bankruptcy reorganization, most of that debt is likely to be converted from debt to new stock at pennies on the dollar, experts say.
But sustained high fuel costs will compound Delta's challenge and could even threaten the prosperity of the discounters. Experts say that in Chapter 11 Delta likely will launch new waves of turnaround tactics, well beyond last fall's plan.
Delta's stakeholders also expect the airline to rapidly move to cut employees' pay and pension plans and retirees' medical benefits. Monday, Delta sent its pilots its only large employee union "a comprehensive, deeply concessionary contract proposal," the union said. Pointing to cost cuts United has wrought in Chapter 11, industry analysts believe Delta could move to terminate its pension plans and seek pay and benefit cuts and efficiency improvements totalling $400 million to more than $1 billion annually.
That's on top of more than $1 billion in annual payroll givebacks from last year, when Delta cut most employees' pay 10 percnet and pilots took 32 percent pay cuts following protracted negotiations. Prior to that they had been by far the industry's highest paid pilots, owing to a lucrative contract inked just four months before 9/11.
In bankruptcy court, if further talks fail to yield a deal with the union, Delta can ask the judge to impose terms. In other airlines' bankruptcy cases, that threat has usually resulted in concessions deals without a judge's intervention.
Delta's other big worker groups agents, mechanics, flight attendants and office workers are not represented by unions.
Richard Aboulafia, aerospace analyst at the Teal Group, said Delta was making real progress in cutting costs and improving operations before this summer's fuel price spike. But the airline was so weakened by four years of losses that it ran out of options.
"The world owes Delta one bankruptcy filing," he said. "The company has paid its bills for more than 75 years. It's a conservative carrier and an industry leader that's the victim of circumstances beyond its control.
"Delta didn't go on some spending spree that caused all these problems," Aboulafia said. "They slowly built up over time. Other airlines have been desperate. But Delta always seemed to have more time."
Staff writer Dave Hirschman contributed to this article
....BUT THEY'LL NEVER TAKE....OUR FREEDOM!!!!!!!!
Northwest just filed for Chapter 11, also.
To clarify some issues that the average Freeper may wonder about:
Nothing will change immediately regarding operations. You don't need to cancel your tickets, get a refund, rebook on another airline, etc. Show up for your flight and your ticket will be honored.
It remains to be seen what will happen with your FF miles. They could disappear, or nothing could happen. It seems most likely that they may be somewhat devalued, but it's entirely possible they could retain full value.
Delta is not "folding" or going out of business.
This is not the fault of "unions"; only the pilots of Delta are unionized and they have and will continue to make concessions. The rest of the nonunion employees also have and will continue to make concessions.
This is not the fault of present management. Blame Ron Allen, but the current team has been very proactive in the face of enormous external obstacles.
If you want to "blame" any single factor, look at fuel prices. A distant second is labor, but Delta has and is continuing to cut those costs. But with fuel at a speculation-free $30-$35/barrel, Delta would be profitable.
Uh.......nope.
Truck lines and the railroads are demanding 13-20 percent fuel surcharges and getting them. Guess I don't understand why airlines don't raise their fares.
It's called over-capacity. There needs to be a purging of extra seats. Reorganization is just going to prolong the problem, IMO.
And so it begins...
Between pension funds, unions, higher fuel prices capped off by Katrina. Delta and Northwest may be the first post-Katrina casualties but they will likely not be the last.
Score another killed for the socialist unions.
Sure has been a great few years in the ol' airline industry. It's funny, because I can't think of any other industry whose companies declare bankrupty with BILLIONS in the bank.
Bingo!
You sell your product for less than it costs to provide it, and you lose money. Delta has efficient airplanes, they have already obtained labor concessions, and they have plenty of passengers (just flew them Sunday, the planes were 100% full).
It is just Delta and the other players are charging a fare that is below their costs. Fuel is more expensive. It costs more to drive our cars. Why should it not cost more to fly?
And accounts payable of twice as much as they have in the bank. The business has lots of cashflow.
It depends. If they're bringing in new execs who are experts at dealing with this sort of thing, it would be hard to ask them to make "concessions" for the sake of the company, since they could just go somewhere else. The reason the airlines can (and have to) ask the unions for concessions is that the unions have artificially inflated wages above market levels.
Add insurance companies to your list.
Eliminate ,liquidate ,Cleanse ,Rebuild.
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