BREAKING:  LUFTHANSA and ETIHAD Merger?

BREAKING: LUFTHANSA and ETIHAD Merger?

In reports coming from Italian media (Italian newspaper Il Messaggero) this morning, it appears that Lufthansa and Etihad are discussing a merger that would combine the 2 airlines.

As of now, the discussions are said to revolved around 2 options.   One being Etihad taking a 40% stake in Lufthansa and the other being a complete merger of the 2 carriers.

This news is just reaching the wires and has not been substantiated by either side, so there may be more smoke than fire to this development.  However, LH and Etihad have been working closely together when dealing with Air Berlin, so it should come as no surprise that their conversations may have expanded to included a larger relationship.

There is a myriad of regulatory hurdles that would have to be cleared in order for any serious deal to take place.   These regulations limit foreign ownership of a European carrier as well as other restrictions, so it may not be as easy to accomplish as the press would like you to believe!

Stay tuned!

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LUFTHANSA Reacts To Ryanair Attack & Changes Tact For Italy……

LUFTHANSA Reacts To Ryanair Attack & Changes Tact For Italy……

Today was a busy news day for Lufthansa and not in a positive manner.    Aside from an earnings report that was lackluster with future forecasts that were not overly optimistic, Ryanair announced something that will force a shift in how Lufthansa does business on its home turf.

It was perhaps not a coincidence, but on the same day that Lufthansa announced their 3rd quarter financial results, Ryanair announced that they would begin offering flights from Frankfurt.    A place where Lufthansa controls over 60% of air traffic movements and also an airport in which LH owns an 8% share.

Ryanair in its announcement stated that 2 737 aircraft would be deployed beginning in March 2017 and will focus primarily on warm-weather holiday markets in and around the Mediterranean region.  Ryanair expects to invest over $200 million dollars into this expansion that is specifically targeted at Lufthansa’s low cost carrier unit, Eurowings.     Ryanair will now operate out of 9 German airports.

Plans for Eurowings never included operating in Lufthansa’s hubs in Munich and Frankfurt, but due to the ‘attack’ of LCC carriers upon Eurowings, Lufthansa had to relent and recently announced that in fact it would operate Eurowings out of Munich, and today they were forced to announce that Eurowings may also be coming to Frankfurt.   This decision had to be made as a direct response to Ryanair’s action.    LH didn’t provide specifics, simply because they were caught off guard by the Ryanair gambit.  However, expect a Eurowings / Frankfurt announcement sooner than later.

 

WHY NOW FOR RYANAIR?
 
Previously, Ryanair avoided Frankfurt-Main (FRAPORT) like the plague choosing instead to operate out of Frankfurt-Hahn which is about 70 miles outside the city.    Their CEO, Mike O’Leary, even went on record last year saying that Ryanair would never fly out of FRA.   What prompted the change in strategy was the inducements that the Frankfurt Operating Authority offered Ryanair, including substantially reduced landing fees, gate expenses, and similar overhead.    In all, Ryanair will pay 40% less than other airlines for the same services.   FRAPORT said this was done as part of a new strategy of offering huge discounts in order to attract more airlines and routes.    My question is where are you going to fit them when the airport is already at capacity and your dainty neighbors don’t want flights departing or arriving when the sun is below the horizon? But I digress……

Of course this irritated LH’s senior management who now are challenging their own business partner in FRAPORT to extend similar discounts to those already using the airport.   This soap opera will get more interesting over the coming weeks as Lufthansa responds to the Ryanair announcement.    But give credit where credit is due, Ryanair simply is taking advantage of an opportunity that was placed nicely onto its lap.  FRAPORT has initially suggested that no deals will be made with existing carriers at Frankfurt, but I can’t see that remaining the case.

 

USED INSTEAD OF NEW…..
 

Also part of todays earnings commentary was an announcement that going forward, Lufthansa may opt to purchase used aircraft instead of new aircraft as it looks to replace aging aircraft in the short haul fleet (regional jets, etc).    The rationale behind this decision is to reduce some of the capital expenditure as a result of softer earnings expectations.    This does not affect any orders that Lufthansa has placed for new aircraft, it may just result in fewer orders for new aircraft.  LH still plans to spend 2.2 – 2.7 billion dollars a year over the next 3-5 years as it takes delivery of new aircraft.
 
NO TO ITALY AND ALITALIA…….
 
As part of the same session today, LH Group CEO Carsten Spohr put to rest the rumors surrounding Lufthansa taking a stake in Alitalia as part of a larger deal to acquire Air Berlin.   There had been conversations between Etihad (stakeholder in both Air Berlin and Alitalia), Alitalia, and Lufthansa about a potential 3-way deal that would have LH take a substantial stake in Alitalia, and in return Etihad would proffer Air Berlin.   This plan was in addition to the existing plan that will have Lufthansa wet-lease 40 aircraft from Air Berlin and fly the planes the routes that those birds normally served.    In his comments, and perhaps they were unscripted, but Spohr simply stated that the personal home that he owns in Italy is about as much as Lufthansa is going to invest in Italy.   Hopefully a speechwriter doesn’t get a bonus for that wit.
 
‘IMHO’ (Brewing for a while!) ………
 
For this LH fan it’s become increasingly frustrating to see an Airline struggle in a business where by all reasonable measures, it should be the dominant player.   It has allowed itself to be nickle-and-dimed into positions that it shouldn’t be in.    It should have stepped up and fixed its labor woes years ago instead of suffering hundreds of millions in losses due to strikes as a result of unhappy labor.    It would have been ridiculously more cost effective to settle with labor instead of being stubborn to bend to a compromise.

I think another mis-calculation was the decision to create some kind of super-LCC within the group.   Thus far Eurowings has not proven itself as a successful model and the jury is still out as far as its viability is concerned.  I’m hoping it works out because in theory EW would be a fantastic complement to the group but on the other hand I think Lufthansa has taken their eye off of what used to matter.

The successful Lufthansa paid attention to their best customers, took their advice to heart, and developed product and services based on what these passengers were asking and willing to pay for.  With that commitment came a fierce loyalty from their best passengers.   That has changed.   No longer is Lufthansa actively soliciting the advice of ‘HON’ and ‘Senator’ level passengers.  Instead they have turned their focus on the low-margin passenger who travels once or twice a year and wants to buy the cheapest seat possible.   They’ve transformed marketing and social media campaigns to focus on the guy or gal who will pay €79 euro for a once in a lifetime trip from Stuttgart to Ibiza.

I’m no marketing expert, but I am well versed in reading corporate financials.   When I see the priority being shifted to filling up an economy cabin with $400 fares instead of focusing on the far more loyal, and far more profitable, premium cabin passenger, it comes as no surprise to see Lufthansa struggling on the balance sheet.    They keep referring to a challenging operating environment but other carriers seem to do well in the same environment.    A few years ago, fuel expense was the scapegoat.   Now the scapegoat-du-jour appears to be the fierce competition coming from LCCs.    Eventually the list of rationalizations is going to run out.  The challenges to Lufthansa’s success are within the airline, not outside of it.

Focus on your best passengers.   They’re the ones that will determine success or failure for any carrier.

 


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Air Berlin / Etihad Woes Turn Into LUFTHANSA Opportunities

Air Berlin / Etihad Woes Turn Into LUFTHANSA Opportunities

Over the past few weeks it was quite obvious that Air Berlin was in ‘perilous peril’.   News starting coming from Germany that Etihad was no longer happy with their stake in Air Berlin and was even looking at ways to divest of their ‘mistake’.    At the top of most headlines was the fact that Lufthansa was prepared to take advantage of AB’s weakness and takeover aircraft and routes while Air Berlin restructured their operations.

With the latest news from Germany on Monday,  we now gain clarity and confirmation of what has been discussed previously.

People in Europe were waking up to headlines that Air Berlin indeed will be restructuring operations in an attempt to return to profitability.    Leading the list of changes is the elimination of over 1,000 jobs and reduction of its fleet of 127 aircraft to only 70 by the end of this year.

To dovetail this announcement, Lufthansa has been planning for this and had previously offered to assume control of 40 of Air Berlin’s aircraft and operate most of the Air Berlin routes that do not serve Dusseldorf or Berlin, both of which are major AB hubs.  LH will ‘wet lease’ the aircraft and crews from AB and will operate them under ‘Eurowings’, LH’s Low Cost Carrier unit.    What this means is Air Berlin is guaranteed to receive ‘rent’ for the aircraft, but Lufthansa gets to keep profits, or absorb losses.

In addition to the aircraft that Lufthansa will take over, it appears that Air Berlin will also sell 17 of their birds currently owned by ‘Niki’ to TUIFly.   ‘Niki’ is an Austrian based subsidiary of Air Berlin.

The timing of the implosion of Air Berlin couldn’t have happened at a better time for Lufthansa.   At the top of LH Group’s priority list for 2016 was to make sure that Eurowings would be set up for success and become accretive to Group’s balance sheet.   So far success has been muted for a variety of reasons including the fact that the fleet is a bit undersized, uber aggressive competition from competitors, and a change in consumer sentiment in Europe that has fewer people thinking about travel.

With the injection of 40 aircraft, new routes, and broader coverage Lufthansa has the opportunity to make Eurowings what it is supposed to be, which is a low cost option for passengers to travel to destinations not usually served by mainline carriers.   At this moment, Eurowings only has 33 aircraft in the fleet making it difficult to reach their goal.    With the influx of 40 new aircraft, crew and hundreds of new flights, EW will have literally doubled in size over night without much effort or substantial risk.

Eurowings now has the opportunity to finally meet the expectations that everyone had for it.  However the expectations may have doubled as well!

Lufthansa Group’s Supervisory Board is scheduled to meet Wednesday, September 27 to review and vote on the proposal for bailing out Air Berlin.  It’s expected to be approved unanimously so expected another announcement in the coming days that confirms what we already know.


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