Thursday July 3, 1:03 PM
American, Iberia, BA plan joint venture: report
(Reuters) - AMR Corp's American Airlines, British
Airways Plc and Spain's Iberia are close to
applying for antitrust immunity to form a joint venture, the
Financial Times said on Thursday.
The airlines aim to reach an accord on profit and revenue
sharing this month, the paper said, citing the executives of
the three airlines.
American and BA are likely to argue a case with U.S.
regulators that the competitive landscape has been changed by
the "open skies" accord.
The open skies agreement between the United States and the
European Union entered into force in March, allowing airlines
to access any U.S. city from any point in the EU and vice
versa.
The agreement promises to increase competition between
carriers, cut ticket prices and to eventually pave the way for
transatlantic mergers to create the first global airlines.
BA and American are also expected to argue that the recent
wave of mergers and new alliances has strengthened many of
their biggest transatlantic rivals, which already have
antitrust immunity with their partners across the North
Atlantic, the paper said.
Continental Airlines Inc , which called off merger
talks with UAL Corp's United Airlines in April said
last month it would ask the U.S. Department of Transportation
to allow it to join United in the Star Alliance system. The
alliance includes Germany's Lufthansa , Air Canada
and six other carriers.
Delta and Northwest, which announced a plan to merge
earlier this year, won US antitrust immunity for a
transatlantic joint venture with Air France-KLM.
American Airlines and British Airways did not immediately
return calls seeking comment.
Iberia could not be immediately reached for comment.
(Reporting by Ajay Kamalakaran in Bangalore; Editing by
Tomasz Janowski)
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