SouthTran II
Regulatory authorities are going to start seeing Southwest Airlines differently as a result of this merger. SWA has done a great job of characterizing itself as the small underdog. In truth, it’s a big airline and this merger is going to get authorities such as the Department of Transporation and Department of Justice to see it a bit differently. SWA flexes more muscle against its own competitors than most realize and this move does eliminate a lot of problems that Airtran was giving it. Airtran had lower costs and a nice service product and competed very, very well against SWA on major market routes. SWA will forever be seen differently going forward now.
Southwest’s fleet strategy has always been a popular topic of conversation. While it’s true that they’ve stayed close to their 737 roots, different aircraft types aren’t unheard of for them. In the 1970’s and 1980’s, they briefly operated 727 aircraft. In the 1980’s they bought Muse Air and operated their MD-80 aircraft for a while too. The addition of the 737-500 was, in some senses, the addition of a different type for them as well.
Adding the 717 isn’t quite the challenge for them that many think it is. This purchase grows their fleet from approximately 550 aircraft to 602 737s and 86 717s or 686 aircraft total. Let’s put that in perspective for a minute. American Airlines has about 630 aircraft, Delta about 728 and the soon to be ContiUnited will have 700. Southwest leaps past AA and plays in the SuperLegacy category on fleet numbers. It will continue to lag behind on capacity measured as revenue passenger miles. Nonetheless, SWA is a huge player on a global scale.
There is already speculation about SWA “de-hubbing” Atlanta. Well, I think the structure of the routes into and out of Atlanta will change dramatically. I think we’ll see a SWA-like operation in Atlanta after a period of time. However, it will remain a “hub” in the sense that will be a major player in the SWA system just like other cities such as Phoenix, Los Angeles, Houston, Dallas, Denver and Chicago. Those cities are hubs too. SWA just doesn’t operate flights into their “hubs” like a network carrier does.
I wonder if SWA isn’t missing an opportunity to reinvent itself with this purchase. Airtran did many things very, very well and they are a profitable and very competitive carrier. They introduced Sirius/XM Satellite Radio on their flights. They were one of the very first airlines to have an all Aircell GoGo Wifi fleet. Their business class product is popular and upgrades to that business class product were also profitable.
There are some elements here that SWA could stand to step back and examine. They aren’t nearly as far from their own business model as they think. SWA is working hard to attract the business passenger and that business class product might well be worth keeping and even introducing across the fleet. Southwest is introducing Row44 Wifi (too slowly in most people’s opinion) and now they have an airline that knows how to do it quickly. They have a unique opportunity to take a look inside the viability of Aircell’s GoGo product and see if they don’t want to reverse course.
I don’t think onboard entertainment is necessary but I do think the Airtran satellite radio offering is a great value added item on their flights and, again, it’s worth taking a look at. I don’t want SWA to be jetBlue but the satellite radio quite possibly “fits” within their quirky nature.
I don’t think many airlines, if any at all, will object to this merger. It eliminates a lower cost competitor for them and replaces them with someone who has rising costs that are moving closer to legacy airline costs these days. In addition, the sheer size of SWA and the access it gains to major slot-controlled markets such as NYC and Washington D.C. mean that legacy airlines can now argue that there *is* enough competition in those areas. I wouldn’t be surprised if Delta and US Airways wanted to revisit their proposed slot swap deal in the near future.
Finally, there is another airline out there that kind of fits neatly into this mix. An airline that would be as unconventional as a purchase for SWA but which would really be a west coast mirror equivalent of Airtran purchase. Alaska Airlines. If SWA is willing to take on integrating an LCC carrier like Airtran, it could take on integrating a sub-legacy carrier such as Alaska Airlines. Especially one with a fleet type that remains compatible with SWA but which offers even more potential since Alaska Airlines operates a broad range of the 737 family. Such a purchase gives SWA a strong presence in all of the regions in the United States and an opportunity to see how a regional airline (Horizon Airlines) works using a very cost effective type: the The Dash 8 / Q400.
You’re loving this, aren’t you…
-R
(in mourning)