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British Airways are they overvalued at 200p (BAY)     

mitzy - 15 Apr 2008 12:27

Recent problems with the new T5 Terminal at Heathrow have resulted in more problems for BA when will they recover their No1 position.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=BAY&Si

skinny - 08 Dec 2009 15:56 - 259 of 327

Closed +7

skinny - 14 Dec 2009 07:55 - 260 of 327

British Airways Agrees Pension Scheme Deficits With Trustees





LONDON -(Dow Jones)- British Airways PLC (BAY.LN), the U.K. airline, said Monday it has reached provisional agreement on the actuarial basis to calculate pension deficits with the Airways Pension Scheme, or APS, and the New Airways Pension Scheme, or NAPS, and on the basis of this agreement, the deficit in APS would be GBP1.0 billion and the deficit in NAPS would be GBP2.7 billion as at March 31, 2009.

MAIN FACTS:

-Airline and trustees will work together to develop a recovery plan, a process which will involve the company consulting with employees and their trade unions.

-Regulatory deadline for the valuation process, including agreement on future contributions required and the recovery plan, is June 30, 2010.

-Both the valuation and the recovery plan are subject to review and approval by the Pensions Regulator.

-Regulator's provisional view is that the technical provisions may be materially below a level it feels appropriate.

-British Airways has asked Roger Maynard to step down as the chairman of trustees of the boards of APS and NAPS to focus on his Iberia role.

-A replacement will be appointed shortly.


skinny - 14 Dec 2009 11:29 - 261 of 327

BA faces increase on 3.7bn pension deficit

British Airways (BA), which will today learn if cabin crew will strike over Christmas, may be forced to fund a larger pension deficit than the 3.7 billion shortfall it revealed this morning in a development which could scupper its merger with Spain's Iberia.

The airline detailed a 3.7 billion deficit, comprising a 1 billion and 2.7 billion shortfall in its two main pension schemes, which is an increase from the 2.1 billion deficit revealed in the airline's last review of its retirement funds and more than the value of the entire company which has a market capitalisation of 2.3 billion.

skinny - 14 Dec 2009 14:54 - 262 of 327

British Airways Cabin Crew Vote To Strike - Union


LONDON -(Dow Jones)- British Airways PLC's (BAY.LN) cabin crew Monday voted to strike, unions said, threatening disruption for travelers over the Christmas holiday period.

The carrier and the unions have agreed to continue negotiations.

-By Jonathan Buck, Dow Jones Newswires; +44 (0)207 842 9237; jonathan.buck@dowjones.com


skinny - 14 Dec 2009 18:45 - 263 of 327

UPDATE: British Airways Cabin Crew Vote To Strike





(Adds detail and comment.)

By Kaveri Niththyananthan

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

LONDON -(Dow Jones)- British Airways PLC's (BAY.LN) cabin crew Monday voted to strike over the busy Christmas period, threatening massive disruption for hundreds of thousands of passengers.

A 12-day strike is due to begin Dec. 22, trade union Unite said, after 92.5% of workers who voted in a ballot supported industrial action. The union said it remained open to negotiations, but only if BA reverses changes to working practices that it already has imposed.

It said it didn't rule out further action.

British Airways in a statement said it was extremely disappointed by the decision, which it said shows a lack of concern for its customers, its business and other employees.

"A 12-day strike would be completely unjustified and a huge over-reaction to the modest changes we have announced for cabin crew which are intended to help us recover from record financial losses," it said.

If a strike goes ahead, it will be the first BA has had since Chief Executive Willie Walsh took charge in May 2005.

The carrier and unions have clashed over BA's plans to restructure and adjust working practices in an effort to return the company to profitability after posting a GBP292 million loss for the six months to Sept. 30.

Strikes are dangerous for airlines because not only are disruptions expensive but they can put off passengers from flying with strike-hit carriers again.

Airlines globally have been badly hit by the economic downturn as passengers traded down to cheaper economy tickets or refrained from travel altogether. Most airlines have swung to a loss this year, while others have gone out of business. The International Air Transport Association forecasts the industry will make an $11 billion loss this year.

BA in particular has been hard hit because of its dependence on lucrative premium traffic across the Atlantic, which has fallen in the wake of the financial crisis and economic downturn. Analysts expect BA to make a GBP800 million pretax loss for the fiscal year ending March 2010, compared with a loss of GBP401 million in the previous fiscal year.

After making no progress on talks that dragged on for nine months, BA introduced cabin crew changes Nov. 16 at London's Heathrow Airport--reducing onboard personnel to 14 from 15--after the U.K. High Court dismissed an injunction application by unions. Instead, the two sides agreed to meet in court Feb. 1 to decide whether the changes are contractual or not.

BA insists changes allow the airline to accept more than 1,000 voluntary redundancies among cabin crew and allow 3,000 to shift to part-time work. BA employs 13,500 cabin crew, of whom 11,500 work at Heathrow. Approximately 9,000 work on long-haul routes. It aims to shed 4,900 positions during the fiscal year ending March 31, of which 3,700 will be in the U.K. BA employs about 38,700 workers.

"This is a double disaster for British Airways," said Bob Atkinson, travel expert from travelsupermarket.com. "Its customers are now going to be significantly affected and the airline will take a financial hit from the action."

At 1527 GMT, BA's shares traded down a penny, or 0.5%, at 200 pence, while the benchmark FTSE 100 index traded up 1%.


halifax - 15 Dec 2009 12:36 - 264 of 327

Where is the bottom for the sp?

skinny - 15 Dec 2009 12:40 - 265 of 327

Well I'm short again!

halifax - 15 Dec 2009 12:41 - 266 of 327

skinny what is your target sp?

skinny - 15 Dec 2009 12:44 - 267 of 327

180 would be nice, but the chart is a bit accademic with the strike looming.

tabasco - 15 Dec 2009 12:48 - 268 of 327

Halifaxhave you heard of the Gorges du Verdon.I think the clues are there?

skinny - 17 Dec 2009 15:49 - 269 of 327

Just closed my short +5

A strike by British Airways cabin crew planned for Christmas has been declared illegal in a High Court ruling.

The court agreed with BA that the cabin crew's union, Unite, had not correctly balloted its members on the strike action.

BA complained that staff in the process of leaving the company had been balloted, breaching industrial relations law.

The 12-day strike was due to begin on 22 December.

tabasco - 17 Dec 2009 16:14 - 270 of 327

Skinnywill this not make the working relationship a lot worse at BA?were there is a willtheres a wayand all that.. just a thought

skinny - 17 Dec 2009 16:16 - 271 of 327

tabbie - probably yes - but it was a short term punt - I'll be back :-)

skinny - 22 Feb 2010 17:08 - 272 of 327

BA strike 'gets strong backing'

British Airways passengers face fresh strikes after cabin crew gave "substantial" backing in a ballot for industrial action, the BBC has learnt.

About 12,000 members of the Unite union have been voting on whether to take action in a row over jobs, pay and working conditions.

cynic - 22 Feb 2010 17:21 - 273 of 327

and as with the miners, they'll get their just deserts in due course
willy walsh may not be the greatest man-manager, but in this instance he's absolutely right ..... BA staff get best pay and conditions of anyone, and in today's climate, this is unaffordable ..... that BA are well renamed as Bloody Awful is irrelevant

fahel - 02 Mar 2010 15:21 - 274 of 327

good rise

skinny - 11 Mar 2010 07:09 - 275 of 327

British Airways strike dates to be considered by union

Union leaders representing British Airways cabin crew will meet later to decide whether to call strike dates.

It comes after talks between BA and the Unite union aimed at averting strike action broke down without agreement.

cynic - 11 Mar 2010 07:43 - 276 of 327

if sp drops back quite sharply, then worth considering a buy.

on a different level, while i have some sympathy with the staff for having their cushy contracts brought back to reality, my vote goes to willy walsh for standing up to the unions and forcing a bit of reality onto them

tabasco - 11 Mar 2010 08:05 - 277 of 327

my vote goes to willy walsh for standing up to the unions and forcing a bit of reality onto them

Cynicgood old Willie paid himself a 6% pay risetaking his salary to mland could also gain 1.1 million in deferred share bonusesas BA lost 400 ml last yearit would be reasonable to conclude that negotiating pay cuts for his staff is a little perplexing for themmost will hope that little Willy ends up a stiff?

skinny - 12 Mar 2010 11:41 - 278 of 327

British Airways union announces strike dates

The union representing British Airways cabin crew has said its members will go on strike for three days from 20 March and for four days from 27 March.



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