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I am not a VAH holder. Incidentally wrote an open letter to Sir Bronson today through LinkedIn to come and steer the sinking ship whereas he is taking glory on Virgin Atlantic. Probably I would never get a reply because LinkedIn profile most likely is maintained by his one of the associates.Virgin should collapse, i know we need more than one airline but funding a collapse airline is just throwing money and we do not even get a share in either of the 2
I understand the emergency need but asking some shares should be a minimum
My point is taxpayer should get some qantas shares..probably worth something, and some in virgin if we give them moneyI am not a VAH holder. Incidentally wrote an open letter to Sir Bronson today through LinkedIn to come and steer the sinking ship whereas he is taking glory on Virgin Atlantic. Probably I would never get a reply because LinkedIn profile most likely is maintained by his one of the associates.
Returning to VAH itself, I respectfully disagree that VAH should collapse on a big picture. Government has bailed few companies and spoiled many millions on few Royal Commissions.
If Government is smart (?) then they would put some KPI, ask for an interest, have Qantas to be a minority share holder of VAH as a precondiiton to put some money to Qantas as well with intelligent correlation money loaned linked with PE or Profitability etc.
That will save all of us from paying absorbant prices on air fares. At the end, tax payers will pay towards excess fare through monopoly. Companies using ONLY Qantas service will pay more. Only beneficial will be Alan Joyce and his shareholders.
With competition war, Virgin could not sustain and Qantas were hungry and efficient - no doubt on that.
We need to see through medium to long term for billion dollar investment.
I cashed out my points on both QAN and VAH yesterday via a beard trimmer ( for my sideburns as my barber no longer visits me at the hotel and I refuse to sit with the hoi poloi talking sober rubbish) and vouchers for stores.M
Got ff cards on both.
Interesting when you compare the news in February 2019
https://australianaviation.com.au/2019/02/virgin-australia-reports-return-to-profitability/
Then their full year financial results in August 2019
https://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20190828/pdf/447xydy6wbtvmx.pdf
Not the sort of business for the faint hearted. IMO
I cashed out my points on both QAN and VAH yesterday via a beard trimmer ( for my sideburns as my barber no longer visits me at the hotel and I refuse to sit with the hoi poloi talking sober rubbish) and vouchers for stores.
gg
My wife and I were booked to fly to Tokyo on Thursday on Cathay Pacific, they have given a one year credit, that has to be used withing 12 months of the original booking date (not date of flight).A few months back I used a bunch of Virgin points to book two business class return flights to he UK for me and the wife, the actual flights are on Etihad (partner airline).
I might have some interesting times ahead seeing how this pans out, eg if virgin goes bust do are my flights to valid??? and if I have to cancel or refund due to restrictions will if be possible if the Virgin points program no longer exists???
Hopefully if Virgin go belly up Etihad still honour the flights and issue credits or rebooking if I have to cancel.
I really hope virgin make it through this thing.
My wife and I were booked to fly to Tokyo on Thursday on Cathay Pacific, they have given a one year credit, that has to be used withing 12 months of the original booking date (not date of flight).
does QANTAS (Jetstar) simply pick up the slack in the domestic market. Not that there is much to pick up at this point, but if Australia keeps gaining on the virus we may open the interstate routes LONG before the international routes. It re-engages some of the QANTAS workforce.
There is every likely hood that private equity will pick up Virgin, strip it back to bare bones and continue operating as a low cost national airline.OK Virgin Airlines has gone under, does QANTAS (Jetstar) simply pick up the slack in the domestic market. Not that there is much to pick up at this point, but if Australia keeps gaining on the virus we may open the interstate routes LONG before the international routes. It re-engages some of the QANTAS workforce.
Should any future Airline in Australia work with the same ownership rules as QANTAS, making it easier to justify govt bail outs in future scenarios. Should we be looking at growing up junior Aussie airline company(s) to fill the role. What happens to Virgins aircraft assets, opportunity to furnish a growing Aussie airline, cheaply?
Just talking out of my hat.
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