Delta
Air Lines and Virgin Atlantic on Monday submitted to the U.S. Department of
Transportation a request for antitrust immunity. The request covers the
Delta-Virgin transatlantic joint venture announced in December, as well
as a "multilateral coordination agreement" that also includes
pre-existing Delta partners Air France, KLM and Alitalia.
The
carriers claimed their new agreements will provide "a meaningful
competitive alternative to the alliance between American Airlines and British
Airways that presently dominates the U.S.-U.K. market."
Should
antitrust immunity be granted, Delta and Virgin intend to jointly plan
schedules through a "metal-neutral codeshare network covering all flights
within and between North America and the U.K." and establish a unified sales
force that would engage corporations and travel agencies.
"Virgin
Atlantic's strong position for London point-of-sale traffic will greatly
enhance Delta's penetration into the London business market, and Delta's strong
position in the United States for U.S. point-of-sale traffic will have the same
effect on Virgin Atlantic," according to the carriers' application. "Delta's
presence and brand recognition in the U.K. is low, which impedes its ability to
compete effectively for U.K. point-of-sale customers, particularly for premium
customers and corporate accounts for which a strong point-of-sales presence is
especially important, and for sales through direct channels, which are dependent
on brand recognition."
The
carriers indicated that each of their sales and pricing teams would coordinate
"with respect to establishing discount policies for corporate and agency
accounts. Joint sales and marketing coordination, which will maximize local point-of-sales
expertise and allow the parties to present a single sales face to customers."
They
added that "corporate discounts and agency commissions are typically
offered on a global basis, and in order to compete most effectively against
AA/BA for corporate and agency customers the joint applicants need to be able
to offer a single, comprehensive package of services to their customers
including both transatlantic joint ventures." The airlines added that
"the lack of credible scale and service on key business routes undermines
Delta's global product offering and has led to disappointing results on key
transatlantic routes that compete with AA/BA."
The
carriers also noted that "corporate accounts have repeatedly told Delta
its service frequencies and time-of-day coverage on NYC-London Heathrow are
inadequate and have refused to commit business to Delta proportionate to its
seat share on the route. Market share data confirms this point, showing that
Delta captures only 7 percent of premium traffic on the route, well below its 10
percent capacity share. The best way Delta can reverse its chronic
underperformance against AA/BA at New York and at Boston is to offer more
frequencies and better time-of-day coverage. Given the slot constraints at London
Heathrow and the other challenges of the market, the only way to accomplish
that is for Delta and Virgin Atlantic to join forces."
Plugging 'Immunity
Gaps'
Meanwhile,
in order to "avoid potential immunity gaps," Delta and Virgin
simultaneously requested antirust immunity for a five-way agreement that would
include Delta's SkyTeam alliance partners Air France, KLM and Alitalia.
"Delta
will be coordinating with Virgin Atlantic on North America-U.K. routes that
involve a nonstop U.S.-U.K. segment. Delta will also be coordinating with Air
France/KLM/Alitalia on North America-U.K. routes that involve connections via
continental Europe, e.g. in Amsterdam or Paris," according to the request.
"Overarching antitrust immunity is needed to avoid the 'horseshoe' risk
that coordination within one set of joint-venture partners will be imputed to
the other."
As
such, the five-way coordination agreement covers such areas as "joint or
coordinated sales and marketing initiatives and activities, including joint
contracting with corporate and agency accounts, coordination with respect to
corporate discounts and agency commissions and incentives, and establishment of
delegated sales responsibility based on home market representation."