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- <text id=91TT0017>
- <title>
- Jan. 07, 1991: Fallen Emperors Of The Air
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 07, 1991 Men Of The Year:The Two George Bushes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 71
- Fallen Emperors of the Air
- </hdr><body>
- <p>They once ruled the skies, but now they skirt bankruptcy. What
- went wrong with the globe-girdling giants TWA and Pan Am?
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--Reported by Jerry Hannifin/Washington and
- Michael Quinn/New York
- </p>
- <p> In their heydays they were America's flag carriers in
- foreign skies. Pan Am pioneered Pacific flights in 1935,
- spanning the sea in Clipper ships that pampered their customers
- like airborne grand hotels. And TWA, under flying mogul Howard
- Hughes, became a premiere transatlantic carrier after World War
- II. But now the once glorious airlines will be lucky to survive.
- After a decade-long downward glide, they have finally come to
- grief in the recession, buffeted by such forces as high fuel
- prices and foreign competition. TWA and Pan Am serve as painful
- lessons that even the strongest business empires will decline
- and fall unless they constantly adapt to changes in the world
- around them.
- </p>
- <p> For TWA and Pan Am, one last hope is to consolidate,
- possibly with each other. But that proposal broke down last week
- in squabbling over terms. Pan Am had tentatively accepted a $375
- million buyout offer from TWA chairman Carl Icahn, but then
- balked when Icahn demanded that the cash-starved carrier file
- for bankruptcy before he would give it a $100 million loan. An
- erstwhile raider, Icahn seemed spoiling for a fight to oust Pan
- Am chairman Thomas Plaskett. Said Icahn: "He just doesn't want
- to give up Pan Am. He's done a terrible job running the
- airline." Retorted a Pan Am spokesman: "Mr. Icahn has not made
- a credible offer."
- </p>
- <p> How did two carriers manage to soar so high, only to plunge
- so deep into distress? Failure was foreign to Juan Trippe, the
- adventuresome World War I flyer who built Pan Am's aerial
- empire. Equipped with a global vision and deft lobbying skills
- in Washington, Trippe won airmail contracts that ultimately
- enabled Pan Am to link points from Buenos Aires to Bombay.
- Trippe had help from Charles Lindbergh, who in 1929 surveyed a
- 2,000-mile Cuba-Panama route that put down at airfields hacked
- out of jungle and malarial swamp.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the airline was eventually undone by Trippe's
- single-minded pursuit of international business. After World War
- II, intense competition sprouted along Pan Am's once exclusive
- foreign routes. Many overseas rivals were subsidized by their
- governments. Without domestic routes to funnel passengers to its
- foreign flights, Pan Am saw its profits begin to plunge. In a
- gamble to win back customers, Trippe ordered 25 Boeing 747s for
- $600 million in 1966. But after they arrived, the 1973 Arab oil
- embargo pushed up fuel prices and a severe recession set in.
- "That was the start of a down-slide, and Pan Am never
- recovered," said Will Player, a retired Pan Am executive.
- </p>
- <p> Pan Am has lost over $2 billion in the past decade and has
- managed to survive only by selling off prized assets, notably
- the Pacific routes that United Airlines took for $750 million in
- 1986. In what would be another major dismemberment, Pan Am is
- reportedly considering the sale of its lucrative East Coast
- shuttle to Northwest Airlines.
- </p>
- <p> Like Pan Am, TWA first soared to prominence by carrying
- mail. Formed in the 1930 merger of Transcontinental Air
- Transport and Western Air, it became America's first
- coast-to-coast airline. TWA expanded rapidly under Hughes, who
- acquired the airline in 1939. But Hughes was an erratic
- businessman who delayed decisions and forced a string of TWA
- presidents to resign. He dithered so long over a major aircraft
- decision that his airline became the last large carrier to enter
- the jet age. Bankers finally forced Hughes to step down in 1960.
- </p>
- <p> TWA also encountered stiff competition overseas. By the
- time of the 1973 oil embargo and recession, TWA was leaking red
- ink so freely that the Transportation Department urged the
- carrier to merge with Pan Am. Instead, TWA went on a spending
- spree, taking over such diverse firms as the Hardee's restaurant
- chain and Century 21 realty, which it placed under a holding
- company. When the diversification failed, the holding company
- spun off TWA to shareowners in 1984.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of takeover fever in 1986, Icahn acquired
- control of TWA for $435 million. Thanks partly to Icahn's cost
- cutting and his refusal to invest in new equipment for TWA's
- aging fleet, the carrier reported a record $250 million profit
- in 1988. But TWA lost $287 million the next year, after Icahn
- took it private in a leveraged buyout and loaded it with more
- than $2 billion of debt. The airline lost an additional $114
- million in the first nine months of 1990. In December, Icahn
- agreed to sell TWA's U.S.-to-London routes and its Chicago gates
- to American Airlines for $515 million. (Icahn has already
- recouped his original TWA investment--plus a reported $33
- million profit--as a result of the buyout.)
- </p>
- <p> Can Pan Am and TWA survive, either together or apart? Icahn
- says a merger would enable the new airline to raise more than $1
- billion in cash by selling overseas routes that overlap. "This
- is just the first step in our growth," Icahn says. "But even
- with the merger, I'm not telling you it's a sure thing."
- </p>
- <p> Some experts doubt that the two carriers can survive either
- way. "The difficulty is that both companies are laden with
- extreme levels of debt," says Paul Dempsey, director of the
- Transportation Law Program at the University of Denver. Predicts
- Robert Crandall, the tough-talking chief of American: "The
- weaker carriers will be absorbed by the stronger ones. The
- result will be a very competitive nationwide system of
- relatively few carriers, virtually all of them competing on
- every major origin and destination route." That could well leave
- Pan Am and TWA as little more than nostalgic memories of glory
- in the sky.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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