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A Continental Airlines plane passes an Untied Airlines plane parked at a gate at George Bush Intercontinental Airport on Sunday in Houston. [Associated Press] |
The new airline would jump past Delta Air Lines in size and have flights reaching from Shanghai to South America. The United name will live on, although the planes will have the Continental colors and logo.
The airline will be run by current Continental CEO Jeffery Smisek. United CEO Glenn Tilton, a longtime advocate of consolidation in the airline industry, will be chairman for up to two years, with Smisek taking over as chairman after that.
The deal will first need approval from shareholders and antitrust regulators. It's expected to close in the fourth quarter.
The new parent company will be United Continental Holdings Inc. It will be based in United's hometown of Chicago and its biggest hub will be Houston. The companies say the combined airline will have revenue of about $29 billion, and $7.4 billion in unrestricted cash.
The companies said combining would save them $1 billion to $1.2 billion a year by 2013. That includes between $800 million and $900 million of new annual revenue, partly from increased international service.
Owners of United parent UAL Corp will hold 55 percent of the combined company, with Continental Airlines Inc shareholders owning the rest. Continental shareholders will get 1.05 UAL shares in exchange for each one of theirs.
The combination will test the notion that the money-losing industry can work better on a large scale. Corporate travelers prefer a wide choice of departure times and a worldwide network.
Just 18 months ago the US Justice Department allowed Delta Air Lines Inc to buy Northwest Airlines to form what is currently the world's largest airline. But many in the industry have wondered whether the Justice Department under the Obama administration will be as inclined to approve a mega-airline as it was under George W. Bush.
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Regulators like to see as much competition as possible on each route because it helps keep fares down.
Combining Continental and United would leave the US with three big international airlines - the new United, Delta, and American Airlines. US Airways Group Inc also flies internationally, but its 2009 international traffic was less than one-third that of American's.
United is the third-largest carrier in the US by traffic. Continental Airlines Inc in Houston is the country's fourth biggest. Both carriers have been losing money. Continental reported a 2009 loss of $282 million as revenue plunged 17.4 percent to $12.59 billion. UAL lost $651 million for the year as revenue fell 19.1 percent to $16.34 billion.
The market capitalization for UAL Corp on Friday was $3.62 billion, while Continental's was $3.12 billion.
Associated Press