Aviation Daily

Darren Shannon
International Lease Finance Corp. has taken delivery of its 400th Boeing 737. The 737-800 will be leased to Prague-based charter operator Travel Services. ILFC’s first 737, a -200, was delivered in June 1978. Including the latest 737, ILFC has received 660 jets from Boeing.

Luis Zalamea
Spanish airline executive Antonio Mata, whose controversial clashes with powerful labor unions made headlines during his tenure as CEO at Aerolineas Argentinas (AR), is now back in Buenos Aires with $75 million to head startup Air Pampas (AP). The airline is currently meeting requirements from the country’s regulators in order to compete in the domestic market with AR and its affiliate Austral.

Annette Santiago
Latin American airport operator Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacifico (GAP) said it expects struggling Aviacsa will continue to scale back operations and cancel additional routes at its Pacific Coast airports this year. It is confident, however, that other airlines will make up the difference by moving into the markets that Aviacsa leaves.

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Annette Santiago
Group travel from China to the U.S. will become a reality on June 17, the day the first Chinese tour group will arrive in Washington. The U.S. and China signed a memorandum of understanding last December that, among other provisions, enables group leisure travel from China and allows U.S. cities to market in China (DAILY, Dec. 12). Some 579,000 Chinese travelers are expected to visit the U.S. by 2011.

Benet Wilson
Airlines operating out of Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport have reached a tentative deal with the Maryland Aviation Administration (MAA) to repay a portion of uncollected fees. Between fiscal years 2004 and 2008, MAA – which oversees BWI – discovered that it had understated the terminal rates per square foot because footage was overstated. It also excluded operating expenses and capital projects and amortization charges, leading to a deficit of $57.2 million in uncollected fees.

Benet Wilson
The runway extension being built under the O’Hare Modernization Program (OMP) will be opening Sept. 25, almost two months ahead of schedule. The 10,000-foot Runway 10L-28R was extended by 3,000 feet. The project was able to finish ahead of schedule because of good weather and contractors doing a great job in the field, OMP executive director Rosemarie Andolino told the DAILY.

Darren Shannon
United Airlines and India’s Jet Airways are seeking broad codeshare authority on domestic and international routes operated by the two carriers.

The Sukhoi Superjet 100 took off Tuesday on its maiden flight from Komsomolsk-on-Amur, Russia.

Darren Shannon
New markets across Asia, the Middle East and South America grew 25% during CAE’s fiscal 2008, boosting revenue by C$173 million (US$172.3 million) and net income almost 20% compared with the same period last year. Revenue, at C$1.42 billion, was up 13.8% year-on-year on solid growth in both civil and military markets sectors. North American sales accounted for 40% of this total. Operating income for the year to March 31 grew 32.8% to C$251.5 million, strengthening CAE’s operating margin to 17.7%.

Staff
Brazilian sister carriers GOL and VRG saw load factor improve 1.6 percentage points to 52.9% in April, as traffic managed to keep ahead of a 33% increase in seat offer. Consolidated revenue passenger kilometers in the international market were up 37.2% year on year to 453,700, while seat offer stood at 858,200 available seat kilometers. On the domestic side, traffic jumped by 13.9% to 1.85 million RPKs and capacity by 22.8% to 2.79 million RPKs. Load factor fell 5.3 percentage points year over year to 66.3%.

Annette Santiago
Wyoming-based Great Lakes’ essential air service flying remains profitable despite increased fuel costs, and the airline stands to win big thanks to the shutdown of several of its competitors.

Annette Santiago
Consolidated operating margins reported by 20 U.S. carriers showed the first loss posted by U.S. airlines since the first quarter of 2006, and data compiled by the U.S. Transportation Dept.’s Bureau of Transportation Statistics show for the first time the role that fuel played in those results.

Darren Shannon
Geneva-based regional carrier FlyBaboo has been renamed Baboo. The carrier, which was officially renamed on May 13, earlier this month took delivery of a Baboo-branded Embraer 190 and already has placed the aircraft into service. FlyBaboo was launched in 2003, but before it launched the airline issued several press releases calling itself Baboo Airways.

Andrew Compart
Copa Holdings filed a registration statement May 13 to sell most or all of Continental’s 10% stake in the Panamanian airline. Under the proposed maximum offering price of $35.88, Continental could take in more than $150 million from the sale of the stock, but the actual offer price will be announced May 15.

Luis Zalamea
Some Latin carriers are looking to their governments for some relief in the face of high fuel prices. The government’s role in alleviating fuel pressures varies from country to country. In Argentina, for example, airlines get monthly government subsidies estimated on the consumption and price of fuel for each individual airline and number of flights.

Jennifer Michels
The weak U.S. dollar in Europe and economic concerns apparently are curbing Americans’ willingness to pay for a European trip. April Trans-Atlantic load factors on the leading carriers fell to a six-year low of 77.8%. Traffic is still up, but the increases are slim and are behind the pace of capacity growth, says Martin & Co. In 2007, Europe’s market share for U.S. travelers was 42.7%, tying with 1986 lows during the Chernobyl nuclear accident and terrorism concerns.

Annette Santiago
Three carriers have submitted proposals to the U.S. Transportation Dept. for essential air service (EAS) flying at Athens and Macon, Ga., but one--Wings Air--may already have plans for the service wehther it receives subsidies or not.

Andrew Compart
In the face of high fuel costs, Frontier will at least temporarily cut staff pay by as much as 10% as it tries secure debtor-in-possession financing. Cuts take effect June 1 and will range from 1% to 10% based on salary, with the 10% cut applying to employees paid $12 per hour or more.

Darren Shannon
United Airlines has replaced its codeshare with defunct Aloha Airlines with a new Hawaiian Airlines agreement. The Hawaiian codeshare, expected to begin this summer, connects United passengers to inter-island flights from four island destinations: Honolulu, Kona, Lihue and Maui, says an airline spokesman. United operates 18 daily flights to these four airports.

Darren Shannon, Robert Wall
British Airways is again contemplating anti-trust immunity with American following the recently successful application by Skyteam carriers and the relaxation of access to London Heathrow airport. CEO Willie Walsh, talking exclusively to The DAILY after a Monday analyst meeting in New York, said an application makes sense “in light of the current regulatory environment.” He would not comment, however, on a possible timeline for such an application and noted that evidence of approval “would have to be strong” before a final decision is made.

Annette Santiago
Although the date has been set for the sunset of Mesa Air Group subsidiary Air Midwest, decisions are still pending about Air Midwest’s 20 Beech 1900 aircraft. The 19-seat aircraft are a standby for essential air service markets like those served by Air Midwest. The market for the aircraft, however, has been tight, so EAS operators will be closely watching Mesa as it weighs its next moves.

By Adrian Schofield
American altered a credit agreement last week arranged by Citigroup and JPMorgan to remove certain cash-flow covenants. The previous covenant included a minimum ratio of cash flow to fixed charges, but these have been waived until June 30. The loan consists of an undrawn $225 million revolving credit facility maturing June 17, 2009, and a fully drawn $440 million secured term loan facility maturing Dec. 17 2010.