American Airlines, Qantas Drop Bid for Deeper Partnership Amid DOT Pushback
29 Novembre 2016 - 12:00AM
Dow Jones News
American Airlines Group Inc., which in June 2015 asked the U.S.
government for permission to expand its existing alliance with
Australia's Qantas Airways Ltd., on Monday withdrew its
application, 10 days after the U.S. Transportation Department
tentatively ruled that the plan would harm competition in the
U.S.-Australasia market.
American, which already code-shares and offers frequent-flier
reciprocity with Qantas, had hoped to win antitrust immunity to
deepen and expand the relationship into a revenue-sharing joint
venture. Delta Air Lines Inc. has such an arrangement with Virgin
Australia Airlines Pty., and United Continental Holdings Inc. with
Air New Zealand Ltd.
But the U.S. government said the proposed partnership would
account for nearly 60% of U.S.-to-Australia seats and enjoy the
largest market share on nearly 200 routes. The DOT also questioned
the proposed alliance's public benefits and gave the pair two weeks
to respond to its findings.
American and Qantas asked for more time so they could fully
demonstrate the benefits of their case, but the DOT last week
turned them down. So they asked the government on Monday to dismiss
the proceeding without prejudice.
"We remain very disappointed in the position," American said in
a statement. "It represents a significant departure from prior DOT
decisions, which have long recognized the pro-competitive benefits
of combining complementary international networks."
The existing, more limited cooperation will continue between
American and Qantas, said American, based in Fort Worth, Texas.
In a statement, Sydney-based Qantas said regulators in Australia
and New Zealand already approved the deal and found it would
deliver significant consumer benefits. Qantas said it and American
will now separately assess their positions before deciding what
they will do next.
The Transportation Department also has thrown a possible wrench
into Delta's application to form an antitrust-immunized joint
venture with Aerovias de Mexico SA, known as Aeromexico. The U.S.
government said the deal would generate significant consumer
benefits but tentatively required the partners divest 16 slot pairs
at congested Mexico City International Airport, divest six slot
pairs at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport and
modify the deal so it can only last for five years.
Delta and Aeromexico, in a Nov. 18 filing, said the divestitures
and limitations are "unprecedented" and "arbitrary" and could
diminish the partnership's economic viability to the point where
the parties would reconsider undertaking it.
Write to Susan Carey at susan.carey@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 28, 2016 17:45 ET (22:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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