Ted's Not-So-Excellent Adventure
Coming of age in the 1980s, I
remember when "Ted" referred to Keanu Reeves, as Ted "Theodore"
Logan in Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure. Alas, no more. Now,
Ted is an airline.
On Thursday, bankrupt United Airlines launched a new lower-fare
affiliate called Ted, with an inaugural flight from Denver to Ft.
Lauderdale. Billed as a hip alternative to such low-fare rivals as
JetBlue and Southwest Airlines, Ted supposedly combines bargain
prices with outstanding service.
United may be one of the finest in the air for passenger
service, but is this really a differentiator in the world of
no-frills airlines? Uh, no. More airlines are getting into the
discounting business daily and passengers expect more for less.
Witness Delta's Song, which is a distant cousin to Ted. Then
there's AirTran and Denver-based Frontier, both modestly successful
no-frills carriers.
Cool new paint aside, Ted is the same old thing. Both Ted's and
Frontier's websites showed that the airlines charge the exact same
price for a proposed trip to Vegas from Denver, leaving a week from
today and returning on Monday, Feb. 23.
Of course, the biggest problem is that Ted actually raises United's
costs. UAL says it will dedicate 45 planes to Ted and plans to keep
them in the air 20% more than its remaining fleet, which will use
additional fuel and jack up payroll. The additional seating in each
of Ted's A-320 aircraft could offset those expenses, but that
depends on taking customers from competitors. It's a failed
strategy, according to aviation consultant Mike Boyd, who has
followed the industry for 20 years. In an interview, Boyd cited
bankrupt carrier Braniff and United's defunct Shuttle by United
Service as prime examples of the failed Ted model.
So what should investors do? For one thing, it would be Foolish
to keep a microscope on UAL's finances. Last month, the company
reported that it reduced fourth-quarter operating expenses by 16%
from the same period a year ago. Ted could reverse that trend
without adding substantial revenue gains.
Certainly the no-frills airlines business is a good one, just
ask Southwest. But none of the larger carriers have successfully
encroached on Southwest's turf. Continental Airlines ditched its
low-fare subsidiary five years ago, and AMR Corporation's American
and Northwest Airlines are ignoring the lower end of the market.
See the pattern here?
United may be picking a fight it can't win at the worst possible
time. Bogus, dude.