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Cost and revenue synergies in airline mergers – Examining geographical differences
Institution:1. Ivy College of Business, Iowa State University, United States;2. Terry College of Business, University of Georgia, United States;3. School of Management and Economics, Shenzhen Finance Institute, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, China;4. College of Arts, Culture, and Scientific Inquiry, University of West Georgia, United States
Abstract:Deregulation, privatization and shifting demand patterns in the airline industry, combined with the emergence of low-cost airlines and rising fuel prices have increased the competitive pressure on legacy airlines. Since alliances do not deliver sufficient benefits to counterbalance these trends, many airlines have engaged in mergers to seek for additional cost and revenue synergies. An extent body of literature investigates the synergy potential in mergers and alliances, but there is no study on how synergies differ among mergers and what potential influence factors cause these differences. This paper aims at explaining differences in synergy estimates and realized synergies in recent airline mergers and places a special focus on geographical influence factors.The research methodology uses a comparative case study comprising six large airline mergers between 2003 and 2012 from Europe, North America and Latin America. After analyzing the cases individually, the pre-merger situation of the merging airlines, the synergy estimates and the realized synergies of the cases were compared.The results show considerable geographical differences in pre-merger cost structures, synergy estimates, and synergy realization. The European mergers present lower synergy estimates but also lower integration costs than mergers in the Americas. Whereas European airlines estimate cost synergies higher than revenue synergies, both North and Latin American airlines expect more revenue synergies than cost synergies from airline mergers. Only one merger showed superior post-merger profitability which indicates that the achieved synergies in the broad majority of the cases are insignificant.
Keywords:Airline merger  Mergers & acquisitions  Synergies  Cost synergies  Revenue synergies  Merger and alliance in air transport  Airline strategy  Management and operations  Aviation case study
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