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Return to Virginia Business - February 2005

News & Features


Independence Air has trouble gaining altitude

by Brett Lieberman
Virginia Business

February 2005

Passenger’s rave about the friendly staff, love the roundtrip fares that run as low as $58 and praise the frequent flights that have brought competition to small and medium markets. Yet Kerry Skeen’s bid to transform Atlantic Coast Airlines from a feeder carrier for United Airlines into the next Southwest Airlines or Jet Blue has hit major turbulence and the outlook is grim.

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Barely six months in business, Independence Air is struggling to fill seats on its 50-seat regional jets. It reported an $83 million third quarter loss and a Chapter 11 filing could come any day. Even worse for Skeen, CEO of Washington Dulles-based corporate parent Flyi Inc., he could be forced to return to flying for United. “I thought it was a very difficult model from the very beginning,” says analyst Raymond Neidl of New York-based Calyon Securities, who recently rated Independence Air as a potential takeover target.

Such skepticism from Wall Street has been born out. After earning $82.8 million last year as Atlantic Coast Airlines flying routes as United Express as well as charters, the company’s losses have soared beyond projections. The company predicted a $25.7 million loss in the second half of 2004, and more than tripled that during the third quarter alone. By the end of January, Independence had eliminated 150 of its 560 daily flights, laid off some employees and agreed to return as many as 20 of its jets to a creditor — nearly a fourth of its fleet — in an attempt to avert a bankruptcy filing.

Even during the heavily traveled holiday season, Independence filled only 54.7 percent of its seats in December, far below the industry average of 70 percent. Skeen’s bid to become the next big low-fare carrier couldn’t have come at a worse time. United and US Airways are in bankruptcy court, and several other carriers could join them. Passenger levels have only recently returned to pre-9/11 levels, and the industry has blamed higher fuel prices for hundreds of millions in losses.

Independence officials acknowledge a few missteps. To save money, the airline did not allow passengers to book tickets through online reservation systems other than its Web site. The company also overestimated demand from some smaller markets. Independence Air has belatedly remedied those errors, cutting some flights and joining the major online booking systems to make it easier for business travelers.

The airline also underestimated the competition. United flew routes at a loss as it cut fares to match Independence’s price even before the new airline launched. “We have a clear cost advantage, but when competitors who are in Chapter 11 price their services at well below their costs, that is a much different competitive scenario,” says Independence spokesman Rick DeLisi.

Independence has begun flying larger Airbus jets on routes to Florida. It also has raised some fares and will offer non-stop service to Las Vegas from Dulles beginning March 1. All the turmoil has benefited passengers in some markets. Since the airline’s launch, fares at Dulles have dropped 30 to 70 percent. The Washington Area Airports Taskforce estimated in June that departures by low-fare carriers would account for half the daily departures at Dulles in 2004, up from 4 percent a year earlier. The change would save fliers $300 million this year.

Critics believe Skeen’s vision was too ambitious. Independence went into too many markets too quickly. “You can’t just throw a bunch of seats into a bunch of markets and have good capacity,” says Neidl of Calyon. Yet DeLisi argues the airline had little choice. United proposed changes to Atlantic Coast’s contract that would have reduced the amount of money that the carrier would be paid, cutting guarantees and greatly expanding its financial risks.

Once the decision to launch Independence was made, the carrier had to decide what to do with its 83 planes. “The choice was to fly them or park them,” DeLisi says of the decision to fly so many routes. “There’s no question that what we’re doing is completely unprecedented and paves a new path in a number of areas,” he says.

Filing Chapter 11 could also help cut costs by cutting the size of its fleet.

When it can fill seats, Independence scores well. About 85 percent of passengers surveyed by the carrier say they would fly Independence again compared to at best 30 to 35 percent when it flew the same routes for United. “You can’t really beat them coming in here,” says Tom O’Reilly, who has flown Independence since its inaugural flight from Buffalo in July.

O’Reilly’s recent $100 roundtrip ticket from Buffalo to Dulles was at least one-third cheaper than other airlines. To get a similar fare, he would have to fly into Baltimore-Washington International Airport and then drive to Virginia.

With daily departures to 38 cities, Independence has quickly grown to be the busiest carrier at Dulles, where it is the only locally based carrier. It has 4,317 full- and part-time employees. Though few projections have panned out regarding fuel prices, competition or capacity, Independence could still have a bright future with or without ties to United. “These guys are perfectly capable of pulling this off,” says Darryl Jenkins, an airline management professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. They just need to make some money, no small feat in the airline industry.

Independence’s choices are relatively easy — cut costs, stop hemorrhaging cash, raise fares or check their egos in the overhead compartment and go back to United.

Return to Virginia Business - February 2005


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