US Justice Dept Approves Delta / Northwest Merger

The US Justice Department approved the merger between Delta Airlines and Northwest Airlines today.   The two companies will now begin to work on executing the combination as quickly as possible and it should culminate with a combined operating certificate in 1 to 2 years. 

 

In the meantime, Delta and Northwest have already made a great deal of progress towards completing the merger.  The executive team has been selected, agreements with pilots have been obtained and each company has been working pretty hard towards merging the culture of each airline together.  While no doubt there are bumps in the road still to be encountered, this particular merger shows great signs of being accomplished with relatively little strife. 

 

Flight Attendants are targeted for being a trouble area.  Delta’s flight attendants are non-union and while there have been a few votes over the years to unionize, all have failed pretty soundly.  Northwest’s flight attendants are unionized and have been characterized as even miitant.  Delta’s CEO, Richard Anderson, has urged that everyone work together and while his stated preference is for no further unionization (and he has backed that up by being very willing to negotiate differences), he also has said that he and the rest of the executive team will abide by whatever vote there is.  It is likely that the flight attendants will have a vote after the merger is officially executed and it is likely that it will be in favor of unionization since a combination of Northwest’s flight attendants with the minority of Delta flight attendants in favor of a union would win any vote.

 

While both CEOs of each airline have professed that such a diverse fleet of aircraft will permit them to “right size” aircraft to a particular route, it is highly likely that the fleet will be pared down over time.   Northwest’s youngest aircraft are manufactured by Airbus and Delta’s fleet is comprised entirely of Boeing products.   Certainly both major aircraft manufacturers will see an opportunity with this merger and both will be pitching their mainstay aircraft lines, the Airbus A320 series and the Boeing 737 series.  With an gentleman’s agreement in place between Delta and Boeing that gives Delta preferential delivery slots, this is Boeing’s opportunity to lose.

 

A good guess is that, initially, the Douglas DC-9 fleet will continue to be eliminated and bases for the Airbus A320 and Boeing 737 fleets will be established at selected hubs.   It is possible that the Airbus A330 fleet will be phased out in favor of more Boeing products such as the new 787 of which Northwest already has a significant order on.  The 747 fleet will most likely be phased out over time in favor of the 777-300 and which Delta already owns in the 200ER/LR version. 

 

The combination of these two airlines will form the world’s largest airline both by revenue and traffic.  This will even dwarf American Airlines by a significant degree.  However, because of industry contraction and the obvious economies and advantages to be gained by constraining capacity in markets that the new Delta will be dominant in, it is likely that the airline will actually contract both its fleet and, to some degree, its employees.  However, major layoffs of any significant numbers are very unlikely and most contraction is likely to be done through natural attrition.

 

 

2 Responses to “US Justice Dept Approves Delta / Northwest Merger”

  1. I wonder how they’re going to handle combining fheir frequent flyer points systems…

    -R
    (who now has a vested interest in finding out)

  2. The accounts will be merged together but the program benefits are not fully decided. Both systems are mostly the same, however.

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