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Thread: Lower Fuel Prices

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  1. #1
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    Quote Originally Posted by melon8r View Post
    we have just priced tickets and they are almost double last March. They have added $330 in taxes since. Prices are way up!!!!!
    Day of the week matters a lot. My flights have stayed essentially the same price for several years now...

  2. #2
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    Well, Chris as someone who spent 35 years in the industry, I may know a little about the facts. Obviously and unfortunately,you are grossly misinformed. Perhaps, you might take time to check the latest aircraft orders placed by the major airlines. I think that the term "right sized" might be the best to describe new equipment.One larger aircraft with decent loads is much cheaper to operate than two smaller aircraft with almost full loads. Delta airlines, for instance, has disposed of its regional jet subsidiary. They do as some other airlines still contract some routes to the regionals. The smaller airplanes were too small, inefficient, and uncomfortable. They have filled in temporarily with the B-717 version of the MD-80,a rather comfortable airplane for average 3 hour flights.Fact is, most flights o Jamaica use newer B-737 or larger aircraft.These days on major airlines-not airlines such as Spirit Air which delight in making the customer miserable-one enjoys clean airplanes with space to put their hand luggage and a carry on. Many flights have an inflight movie and WIFI. One enters the aircraft from a modern gatehouse via a nice jetway even in Jamaica. Please take a look at the taxes included on each ticket charged to the passenger by the Jamaican government. Also check-on the internet- the amount paid by the airline to merely land at any Jamaican airport or any other airport. Then again check to see what the airlines pay to use the jetway and terminal.How can they charge the fares that they do and still make a profit. You are even given complimentary beverages and sometimes a meal in economy class. Now you can try as much as you can to tell me that airline customers are not getting a fair deal. If you wish you can drive a car to your destination or, in the case of Jamaica, you can find a boat out of Miami for almost the same cost as an airline ticket and spend a few days getting to Jamaica but I am fairly certain that you want to get to Mobay in 2 or 3 hours and have your luggage waiting! Further more I worked training aircrews. Safety was our number one concern and US airlines are firmly regulated in terms of safety. After all, pilots are the first to arrive at the scene of an accident.The US and in fact the world is experiencing the best safety record in the history of aviation. How dare someone with so little knowledge insult the integrity of American pilots. Never have I even had a suggestion from management that I compromise safety! Why are American pilots the most sought after pilots in the world. Many royals and other dignitaries abroad insist on American pilots. American flight training and safety and operating procedures set the standard for the aviation world and in fact are the ones used by every airline in the world. Sir or Ma'am I suggest that you rein in your rhetoric and check your facts.

  3. #3
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    Chris B, negrilsand wrote "new and better", not bigger.

    I don't understand the complaints either, I find flying very convenient and usually quite reasonable (if not, check Business/First Class offerings for comparison, with their benefits). Pay around the same as early 2000's.

    Passing along a random comment made by an older gentleman while we were filling our gas tanks in Wisc, "A long time ago someone told me First Class is usually only about 25% more..." Especially when flying short notice, I add.

  4. #4
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    I expect the fuel surcharge will drop when the current fuel hedging contracts start to roll over. We will be looking at lower oil prices for the foreseeable future, so airlines will naturally pass along fuel savings in order to stay competitive.
    The exception to this will be for Canadian airline passengers. The Canadian airline market is ruled by a duopoly. We will continue to be overcharged for airfares just as we are for pretty well everything else, including gasoline.
    Oh! - sorry, I shouldn't complain, sorry . . .
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  5. #5
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    My fare this year was also the cheapest (or close to it) as I have ever paid in the 12 years that we have been going to Negril. Plus it was a direct flight, and 2 free bags. No complaints here!

  6. #6
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    Negrilsand, I certainly respect your experience in these matters, but please don't misinterpret my points. It was not my intent to malign any airline employee, least of all the dedicated folks who are on the front line and in the air to assure our safety and comfort. Reviewing my post will show how I dared not. In fact, I personally thank all crew members I can as I depart a flight.

    My comments were directed at the boardroom denizens and bean counters who keep coming up with more ways to nickel and dime us to death. If that was your role in the industry, then I can understand your indignation at my comments, but I won't apologize for them. The costs you note for gate facilities, taxes and such are given costs of doing business; but please don't imply that the airlines give the flying public something for nothing... they don't. I've never met a corporate executive who liked a government regulation that required added expense or required his company to do anything that it should be doing in the first place.

    My informed view comes from my personal experiences over many years as a consumer of corporate and leisure travel. I've seen the evolution of the innards of an airliner from a fairly comfortable coach experience to what's become an obtrusive and dreaded timeframe to be tolerated rather than enjoyed. Same cabin, more seats, less comfort, more profit... that is the continuum. Customer satisfaction surveys have born this out year in and year out.

    As for my cynicism on corporate intent, well that comes from years of observation and time served in my own middle management hell, and I'm only too happy to espouse upon it any time I get to vent, now that I'm retired and earned the right to do so. Anyone who believes that corporates are keen on serving their customers at the expense of their stockholders is living in a long lost past.

    Reactionary? Probably. Misinformed? That depends on which view, and which information we choose to review. But getting back to the original topic, will airfares drop because of a temporary glut? Opinion... The savings will not trickle down to the flying public.

  7. #7
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    The airline industry is quite different in many ways than say General Motors for instance. GM can have a flaw in their product that can be ignored for years. Hundreds of lives can be lost. When the outrage finally emerges, GM can try to ignore it, hire expensive public relations people and parade nonsense speakers before congress. GM then minimizes their cost by hiring the best lawyers to fight in court. GM's lobbyist fight to minimize the impact of legislation. Now look at the airline industry. Firstly, the airline is selling service which they truly pride themselves in and must provide at a certain level to maintain the very slim profit margin. The last time that I checked no airline even achieved a 10% profit margin. Secondly and most importantly, the airline employees including every person in management is right there with you on the airplane. I would guess that the CEO and president averages being on an airplane at least 300 days a year. Further more, our friends, close family and relatives are riding our airplanes. Aviation people can be close, we never forget those that we have lost, even those from rival airlines.We are not sitting in an office in Detroit removed from the tragedies that might be caused by a bad product or decision. I know that I tried to be at the boarding door for each flight and looked every passenger in the eye as I welcomed them on board. Every single time, I sat down in the cockpit and had images of laughing kids with their families and sometimes the images of a grieving family going to a funeral. I will tell you that there was an extra weight of responsibility on me. The CEO was not sitting in the cockpit but I know that he was available 24 hours a day dreading that call in the middle of the night informing him of some serious operational problem. The buck stopped with him and with every person involved. Within hours of any accident the airline is swarmed with FAA inspectors. Every minute detail is examined. How did the pilots get to the airport for their duty day. What did they eat and drink. How did they sleep the night before their duty period. Where they properly trained in every little procedure. I could go on and on. My airline once had a tragic accident.Many people were killed including some very close friends of mine. With in months of this accident, we had two procedural errors in flight. My FAA counterpart in a conversation told me bluntly that if you have another incident anytime soon, we are looking at suspending your operating certificate. The consequences of management policy is serious and airline executives can be tough, but to imply that they would in any way sacrifice safety to benefit the bottom line is just silly and dumb.That would ,on the part of the airline, to be completely self defeating. Enough!

  8. #8
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    negrilsand & Chris B,

    Both very interesting points of view!!! I didn't intend to create such a debate (my bad).

    My initial posting was based on a Bloomberg Business Report (Read Below)

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-1...s-margins.html

    which states that the Airline industry has seen record profits and are likely to "REAP" an additional 25% profit in 2015.

    "Mergers including the formation of American Airlines Group Inc. (AAL) out of AMR Corp. and US Airways Group Inc. have seen three main network operators emerge in the U.S., helping to rein in capacity and give carriers better control over fares."

    I flew JFK to Munich (RT) in September (14) and paid $1400 for a coach ticket (21 day advance purchase) roughly a 70% increase over 2013, same route , same airline, same class. I checked for the fun of it three days before departure and the same ticket was now $2000???? I am sure there is some explanation that makes sense but not to me.

    I understand the exorbitant taxes and fees added to the base ticket prices but I still find fares to be higher than many can afford. furthermore there were about 10-15 empty seats in coach, 5 or so in business class. Why isn't there a "Stand By" opportunity for passengers willing to wait and see for a lesser fare to fill otherwise empty seats????

    Many might say I'll pay whatever it takes to get from point A to point B (especially Jamaica) and perhaps many have found the lowest fares in years. My point was only that Gasoline is cheaper at the pump, Heating Oil is the lowest in several years, why shouldn't there be savings for airline passengers as the airlines too are benefiting from the drop in oil prices (all companies buying bulk fuel purchase futures contracts, yet the savings at the pump and at home are immediate not 6 months down the line).

    My only point being that if the airlines can offer less expensive tickets and make a symbolic "Olive Branch" gesture to its customers I believe it would stimulate more business and result in trickle down advantages to everybody, meaning more spending and more jobs. 25% percent of zero is nothing for everybody involved. Just sayin!!!

  9. #9
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    $900 for the two of us out of Toronto to Jamaica. Last year the fare was $1157. Just sayin...

  10. #10
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    Re: Lower Fuel Prices

    Computers are wonderful devices. Airlines use a procedure-program- called "yield management". The objective is to sell seats to derive the maximum profit per average seat yield. So early on weeks before a flight date, seats are offered at a certain price, as demand increases or decreases, the price is adjusted. Typically as the date approaches, demand increases as there are passengers needing to travel on short notice so the price increases. Ideally, every seat will be filled at the optimum price. But this is not a perfect bit of science so a few seats will be empty. On average however, the maximum yield per seat on average will be achieved. It works! That is why the person setting next to you may have paid much less than you or much more than you. For those that think that the airline should pass on their saving as per decreased oil prices and resulting increased profit in the form of a reduced fare, perhaps the airline might do this if you agreed to fly your usual flights as fuel prices increase while paying an increased fare to ensure that the airline made the same profit as before. I doubt that you would agree to that.

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