Airlines Mergers Explainer

A Hawaiian Airlines plane at Kahalui, Hawaii in 2005, left, and Alaska Airlines planes in 2021, in Seattle. Alaska Airlines announced on Sunday that it will buy Hawaiian Airlines for $1.9 billion. That’s raising questions about how antitrust regulators will view the deal, and whether past airline mergers have hurt consumers. Lucy Pemoni, Ted S. Warren/Associated Press

Another proposed airline buyout is renewing debate over whether there has been too much consolidation in the industry – and whether consumers are paying the price.

The Biden administration has taken a tough stance against mergers, and it is certain to take a close look at Alaska Air Group’s proposed acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines for $1 billion in cash.

The deal is smaller than the mergers that reshaped the airline industry more than a decade ago. But the Justice Department is already fighting another smallish deal – JetBlue’s proposal to buy Spirit Airlines.

Alaska Airlines parent Alaska Air Group announced Sunday that it will pay $18 per share for Hawaiian – a huge premium over Hawaiian’s closing stock price on Friday. Hawaiian has struggled to recover from the pandemic and new competition from Southwest on intra-islands flights. It has lost $159 million so far this year.

Alaska says Hawaiian will continue to operate as a stand-alone brand, an unusual step.

Here’s some information about each airline, their customer bases, the way antitrust regulators will view the deal, and the impact of past mergers.

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SIZE OF THE DEAL

Alaska Air Group, based in Seattle, valued the deal at $1.9 billion, which includes the assumption of Hawaiian’s $900 million in net debt.

Together the two airlines will have 365 planes and serve 138 destinations, including 29 outside the United States.

MARKET REACTION

Shares of Hawaiian Holdings Inc. nearly tripled, closing Monday at $14.22. Alaska fell 14% to close at $34.08.

ALASKA AND HAWAIIAN CUSTOMERS

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Many Americans, including travelers in the middle and eastern parts of the country, have never flown on either of these airlines.

Alaska Air Group, based in Seattle, is the fifth biggest U.S. airline company by 2022 revenue, slightly ahead of JetBlue, but is not widely known beyond the West Coast. Its biggest operation is in Seattle, and it bulked up in California in 2016 by buying Virgin America for $2.6 billion after a bidding war with JetBlue.

Hawaiian Airlines – only a quarter the size of Alaska Air by revenue – operates flights throughout the island chain and to the U.S. mainland and also relies heavily on traffic between Asia and Hawaii. Its only East Coast destinations are New York and Boston.

WHAT ARE THEIR REPUTATIONS?

Alaska and Hawaiian are rather traditional airlines. Their fares are typically in line with larger carriers and higher than those charged by discount airlines. In September, both charged slightly lower than average fares for economy-class seats between Hawaii and the mainland, according to figures from aviation-data firm Cirium.

Helped by generally mild weather, Hawaiian often tops the industry for on-time flights, and Alaska usually ranks near the top too. Both score in the middle for consumer complaint rates, according to U.S. Department of Transportation data.

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FREQUENT-FLYER PROGRAMS

Alaska says the airlines will operate separately but under a single loyalty program. Currently Alaska has Mileage Plan and its target offers HawaiianMiles. It’s not clear whether benefits would change much, although Alaska says HawaiianMiles members will be able to earn and spend miles on 29 partner airlines in the Alaska program.

WILL REGULATORS EXAMINE THIS DEAL?

This deal will provide another test for the Biden administration’s resolve to preserve competition in various industries.

The Justice Department succeeded earlier this year in killing a partnership between JetBlue and American Airlines – a federal judge ruled the alliance was uncompetitive and violated antitrust law – and a trial over the government’s lawsuit to stop JetBlue from buying Spirit Airlines is scheduled to wrap up this week.

PRO AND CON ARGUMENTS

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In the JetBlue-Spirit case, the Justice Department sued because it wants to preserve Spirit, the nation’s biggest discount airline. If regulators sue to block the Alaska-Hawaiian deal, they are likely to make a different argument – that it would put too much traffic between Hawaii and the U.S. mainland in the hands of one company.

Between them, Hawaiian and Alaska control about 40% of that market, according to Cirium.

Alaska CEO Ben Minicucci said buying Hawaiian will help it compete against the four biggest U.S. airlines. That is exactly the same argument JetBlue made to defend its purchase of Spirit – and that didn’t stop the Justice Department from suing.

Henry Harteveldt, a travel analyst for Atmosphere Research Group, said the fact that Alaska is not buying a low-fare airline like Spirit could improve the chances that regulators will let the purchase of Hawaiian go through.

Jamie Baker, an analyst for JPMorgan, said “Alaska-Hawaiian is much more of a plain vanilla, run-of-the-mill merger than, say, JetBlue-Spirit,” making regulators less likely to sue.

But William McGee, an airline expert with American Economic Liberties Project, which opposes industry consolidation, said the deal is all about market size, not consumers.

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“Nothing about this merger is good for competition or consumers, especially in Hawaii. And the last thing we need is a continuation of the consolidation that has already caused so many problems for air travelers, workers, and entire cities and regions of the country,” he said.

PREVIOUS AIRLINE MERGERS

The federal government raised few objections to a slew of mergers that consolidated power in the industry. American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and Southwest Airlines control about 80% of the domestic air-travel market, and all of them grew significantly through mergers between 2008 and 2013.

Under President Biden, the Justice Department seems to be showing some buyer’s remorse that previous administrations didn’t try to block mergers that eliminated Northwest, Continental, US Airways and AirTran.

IMPACT ON TRAVELERS

Airfares rose faster than inflation for a time after the initial wave of consolidation, but that trend has cooled. The average fare today for a flight within the United States is 35% lower than in 2000 when adjusted for inflation, according to the Transportation Department. However, fees have grown sharply and partly offset lower fares.

The industry trade group, Airlines for America – both Alaska and Hawaiian are members, as are the largest U.S. carriers – insists that competition is robust.