This approach is unsolicited, wholly opportunistic and significantly undervalues the group’s businesses and attractive long-term growth potential.
Lets just say that they did work through the unions, esot, trade commissions, etc & that Aer Lingus did sell to Ryanair for what ever price.... will it realy be the best thing for the Irish traveller/consumer? Without serious competition from a big player such as Aer Lingus.... who knows what stunts Ryanair might pull if they are the main player.
Aer Lingus are not the only long haul operator working out of Dublin - e.g. AA, Continental, Delta, US Airways and Aer Transat to North America, for example.But if you don't fit into those categories - your only choice is to toddle off to London for your long haul flying.
Do you expect any commercial company (including Aer Lingus - whether or not Micko gets his hands on it) to give such a guarantee?Clubman, I guess so, as long as you feel confident in those US airlines long term unfailing commitment to providing DIRECT access to International routes ex-Ireland forever more, come hell or high water.
Pure speculation.Micko will probably scrap a lot of the services as quick as he can.
Yeah - the Government should have forced us all into this one given the share price performance since IPO. What a rip off! :mad:Whoever advised 'de guvmint' about the flotation really DO have egg on their faces. I can understand Cullens and Bertie's desire for a succesful flotation - didn't want a repeat of Eircom - but it seems to me that too many people really believed all the negative hysteria about the company...you remember "Aer Lingus is useless - worthless - give it away....." etc etc and they fell over themselves to do exactly that. Give it away.
Perhaps not, but I'd have trusted Aer Lingus (in the proper hands) to hang on to the very bitter end - as they did for years, even when everyone else was pulling out.Do you expect any commercial company (including Aer Lingus - whether or not Micko gets his hands on it) to give such a guarantee?
So was the notion of Ryanair buying Aer Lingus 48 hours ago!Pure speculation.
They've proven they couldn't organise a p*** up in a brewery.Yeah - the Government should have forced us all into this one given the share price performance since IPO. What a rip off! :mad:
Strategic thinking? Paranoid delusions more like...Wouldn't it be fun now if Ireland and the US were ever to have a little 'tiff', and the US Government were to apply some minor 'economic sanctions' on us?
'Discouraging' US carriers from operating our transatlantic services for a while would be a quite effective method, no?
Absence of STRATEGIC THINKING Clubman.
Huh?!Maybe you should stand for election. FF or PD?.
In case you didn't notice I was being facetious.They've proven they couldn't organise a p*** up in a brewery.
The tax payer has been shafted.
You can also forget all those new routes East-Bound that Mr.Mannion was about to launch.
The companies name was 'Buzz'. Anyone remember it?
O'Leary stripped what he wanted out of it, and wound it up within months. Another annoying competitor squashed and eliminated.
De guvmint SOLD more than 50% of the companies shares at launch - for 2.20 euro. It appears O'Leary has bought 19% at an average of about 2.50 euro per share and is still buying at 2.80 per share. That means De guvmint has thrown away between 15% and 25% of the TRUE value they could have achieved. I read somewhere that O'Leary is expected to pay up to 3.20 per share to gain a controlling stake.??? Whilst it's quite unclear whether Ryanair will succeed in a full takeover - if they did the gov. (e.g. the taxpayers) will get far in excess of €500m. How does that constitute being "shafted"? The figure would likely be much greater as any takeover is unlikely to be achieved at €2.80 a share - more like €3+.
To quote Clubman - This is PURE SPECULATION.Well the plan is to run Aer Lingus as a seperate brand and indeed as a seperate company. I'd imagine most existing short haul flights would be brought under the Ryanair brand (with all it's cheap and cheerlessness to bout) whilst the Aer Lingus brand would be positioned as a pure long haul carrier (cheap and cheerless with a dash of humanity such as a glass of water or even a scone on flights lasting over 7hrs!!) To me this would be the logical method.
Rather than shy away from new long haul routes by Mr. Mannion, i'd expect Ryanair to pursue a far more aggressive expansion plan. At very least Aer Lingus would set up a long haul base outside Ireland within the coming years - use those Heathrow slots for non-ireland routes if that's allowed. Or even use an existing Ryanair airport such as Gironia or Frankfurt to split ground overheads.
Obviously all commentry is based upon a quite uncertain positive outcome in the takeover attempt. IMHO, I think the whole thing is a no brainer for O'Leary - if he wins that's perfect, if not then he can slowly sell off the 20% over the next year or so at a decent profit - Ryanair has bought in between €2.20 and €2.80 or so... probably an avg. price of €2.45 or so and even before the takeover attept the share price looked like it would hit well above that based purely on the firms own figures and potential. Also Ryanair has garnered yet more publicity...
Think of all the E-Voting machines they could have bought for that!The loss to taxpayers is therefore in the region of 150M to 350M euro.
Cuchullain, I really doubt if O'Leary would want to serve LHR. Honestly, all messing aside, its just a no-brainer that he'll avoid the hassle with delays that is part and parcel of ops in there. It just doesn't fit the Ryanair shorthaul model.
And even more importantly, selling the LHR slots will recoup around 250 Million of his expenditure on the company - effectively buying him 25% at the 1 Billion euro capitalisation mark.
Protection of the Heathrow slots is written into the company's articles of associaton.
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