I think when it will be Eurowings, there will be no more wetlease contracts at all, this is not fitting in their cost structure i assume.
Sad times.
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I think when it will be Eurowings, there will be no more wetlease contracts at all, this is not fitting in their cost structure i assume.
As said many times before, LH saved SN from bankruptcy. Without LH there would be no SN today.
In the the ten years of Gustin’s reign SN has continuously been on the edge of bankruptcy, his own words just before the LH takeover: “we are in survival mode”. It is LH which saved SN, not Gustin.
Times have changed, the economy is way stronger than the moment LH stepped in. And not to forget, they know the recipe for success that suites present market demand.
Not sure, recently C Spohr urged Gustin to spend more time improving his figures iso on his bicycle in Africa.flightlover wrote: ↑03 Feb 2018, 14:12Times have changed, the economy is way stronger than the moment LH stepped in. And not to forget, they know the recipe for success that suites present market demand.
I think it's fair to say it has been Lufthansa's money and a lot of hard work from Gustin and his team, yet as so often both are eager to take full and sole credit for the success, which seems to be what this is really all about: not so much the difference in strategy (both brussels airlines and eurowings have been made remarkably identical already), but who can lead them in future: 2 seperate teams (each in charge of just one brand), or just one team (in charge of an integrated brand).
A rumour in a press article is not a fact. Correct statement should be: "some newspapers report that rumours are that Spohr said to Gustin that he should spend more time..."
More than a rumour, the Standard is pretending they quote an insider.Passenger wrote: ↑03 Feb 2018, 14:59A rumour in a press article is not a fact. Correct statement should be: "some newspapers report that rumours are that Spohr said to Gustin that he should spend more time..."
Source with "rumours are":
http://www.gva.be/cnt/dmf20180203_03337 ... -het-einde
http://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20180202_03336203
De Standaard doesn't mention the qualification from their "insider", so it's probably a trade unionist. Without a real name, the above quote remains a rumour.Poiu wrote: ↑03 Feb 2018, 15:35More than a rumour, the Standard is pretending they quote an insider.Passenger wrote: ↑03 Feb 2018, 14:59 A rumour in a press article is not a fact. Correct statement should be: "some newspapers report that rumours are that Spohr said to Gustin that he should spend more time..."
Source with "rumours are":
http://www.gva.be/cnt/dmf20180203_03337 ... -het-einde
http://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20180202_03336203
Me neither, but …One can expect that if someone pays (above and under the table) the Congolese in power this can change very rapidly. Seen the current troubles on a diplomatic and political level between both, Belgium isn’t the ‘Grand Papa’ anymore…Asians pay and invest a multiple in Congo…
Not really…He executes the plans that were already known…At the moment he said whatever was important to calm the shareholders and SN staff because at such a key moment one must avoid strikes or bad news. So he did what he was paid for as a CEO…
Air Belgium
Eurowings is wet-leasing aircraft from TUI, Privatair, Sun Express, Brussels Airlines, ...
The SunExpress one is soon to be finished as SN will take over the Long Haul flights as it would become a mess having one A330 being operated by XG while the other is operated by SN ... and the TUI and Privatair is because they're short in planes while Brussels Airlines isn't really a wetlease as it's one from the group
You’re changing opinions way to many times. What you are giving here would be a perfect definition of what eurowings is. Everything and nothing, trying to appeal to everyone, but not convincing anyone. It’s a project bound to fail, but by the time it will happen SN will have disappeared together with all of their intellectual assets as they are fully owned by the holding in LH hands and BRU will be left without a home carrier once again (hence my post of the very wrong decision for BRU to put all their eggs in the basket of a struggling airline). This scenario is what I have feared for a long time and was very vocal about. I told you so would be way to easy to say to everyone who mocked me every single time.Inquirer wrote: ↑03 Feb 2018, 14:23
One can't have growth without some form of change from time to time, and yes, maybe some refocussing may be appropriate too after all the commercial reorientation and rapid growth they saw over the past few years, because when you have become a company who effectively needs to be everything to everybody, everywhere and all the time, you risk being second choice behind the market leader in each of the market segments you target. It's a comment I've made in relation to another large (foreign) airline operating from Belgium in the past too, havent I, Sean?