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Virgin America causing turbulence in US airspace
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 15 - 08 - 2006


Start-up U.S. air carrier
Virgin America Inc. has not flown a plane or even gotten a
license to operate, but it is already creating turbulence in
the U.S. airline industry, according to Reuters.
Incumbent carriers, led by Continental Airlines Inc., have
lobbied hard to keep Virgin America from getting off the
ground.
Those efforts, which have slowed Virgin America's efforts
to gain U.S. government approval to start flying, show how
intense competition is in the U.S. airline industry and how
fragile its recent recovery may be.
"For the first time in six years roughly, the airlines are
starting to experience some profitability, and the last thing
that the domestic carriers want to see is new competition,"
said Dan Petree, dean of the college of business at
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.
Virgin America has until Wednesday to respond to industry
objections to its application for an airline license, which was
initially filed last December. The U.S. Department of
Transportation then has up to 180 days to make a decision on
whether to allow the airline to operate.
Continental and others have attacked Virgin America's links
to British-based Virgin Group, which holds a 25 percent stake
in the company, lends the airline its brand and has promised to
provide financing.
The airlines say that Richard Branson's Virgin Group, which
has stakes in airlines in Europe, Australia, and Nigeria,
effectively controls the U.S. airline in violation of U.S. law,
which restricts foreign control of domestic airlines.
"We have absolutely no opposition to start-up discount
airlines," said Continental spokesman Dave Messing. "Our only
concern is that, since we abide by U.S. laws, our competitors
also abide by U.S. laws."
Virgin America says it's controlled by U.S. citizens and
conforms with U.S. law. It says rival airlines are using the
foreign control argument to limit competition.
U.S. law prohibits a foreign equity stake in a U.S. airline
of more than 25 percent, ostensibly for the sake of national
security.
Six years ago, JetBlue Airways Corp. breezed through the
approval process without the big airlines putting up much of a
fuss, but that was before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks pushed the
airline industry into a recession that led to billions of
dollars in losses. And JetBlue's rapid growth, despite the
industry's malaise, showed that new competitors needed to be
taken seriously.
Virgin America plans to enter the market armed with $177
million in start-up capital, with the majority coming from
private equity investors Black Canyon Capital and Cyrus Capital
Partners. This funding represents the largest seed capital of
any start-up U.S. airline, surpassing the $130 million
initially raised by JetBlue.
"About three-quarters of capacity is dominated by
incumbents who have a cost structure that is 25 to 50 percent
higher than new-generation companies," said Fred Reid, chief
executive of Virgin America and a former president and chief
operating officer at Delta Air Lines Inc.. "It's a massive
business opportunity."
But it will take the airline time to build up momentum. "In
the first 24 to 36 months, I don't think they will be large
enough to make much of a measurable impact," said Tim Sieber,
general manager of airline consultancy The Boyd Group.
Virgin America, which says it could start flying within
weeks of receiving its license, plans to position itself as a
low-cost, high-perks airline. It says it will have in-flight
entertainment features that go beyond JetBlue's satellite
television offering.
Virgin America has 33 Airbus planes on order, but plans to
start operation with just two to four aircraft. Reid says that
the airline has the ability to grow its fleet at a rate of one
to two planes a month indefinitely.
The airline intends to first fly between San Francisco and
New York. Brian Clark, Virgin America's vice president of
planning and sales, says the airlines is aiming for 20 routes
in two years.
Good news for other airlines is that Virgin America has
profits, rather than growth, as its top priority, which means
starting a ticket price war is not its most likely strategy.
"Our goal is to be financially successful," says Reid. "I don't
care if I'm a mega-airline or a boutique airline."


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