American Airlines, a subsidiary of AMR Corp. (NYSE: AMR), has announced that it received the green light from aviation officials to return all of its 300 grounded jets to service. The jets were temporarily grounded as the Federal Aviation Administration surprised the airlines as officials thought the required repairs had been made weeks ago . Officials said that "the wiring still was not secured and stowed properly in wheel wells."
American, the U.S.'s largest airlines, resumed flying the MD-80s today after canceling more than 3,000 flights this week. The AP story linked to above quoted an S&P analyst who reckoned the cancellations cost the struggling airlines at least $30 million.
There is quite a row going on at SeekingAlpha (warning: foul language) where top media blogger, Jeff Jarvis, has recently turned his sights on the airline industry as a whole. Jarvis, well-known for his views on the death of old media, Jarvis augers that without change the whole industry is in a death-spiral.
Says Jarvis, "I think the essence of their future is: They [the airlines] have to explore new value by having a decent relationship with us, using that new value to improve the experience so they can have a decent relationship. Screwing your customers is the least sustainable business model."
Them's fightin' words...
Zack Miller is the managing editor of IsraelNewsletter.com and a former equity analyst for a leading multinational hedge fund.










