U.S. legacy carriers like American Airlines, parent AMR (NYSE:AMR) are getting eaten up by their budget-carrier rivals, losing significant market share to the younger upstarts over the last six years, according to data released Monday from AirFinancials.com, said MarketWatch. Between 2003 and 2009, domestic capacity at the legacy airlines have declined by 85 billion available seat miles (ASM), or by 21%, on average. Over the same period, capacity among low-cost carriers added over 84 billion ASMs.
"The challenge for the old legacy airlines is to find a way to be cost competitive with these growing domestic carriers that have never incurred some of the legacy expenses," AirFinancials.com said
Mar 8 · 3:09:00 PM · Source: MarketWatch
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by Steve Wieczorek
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