
Managing Partner, Diciottofebbraio Srl
Member of the Transportation Council
David Jarach, PhD, is a Managing Partner at Diciottofebbraio, a leading all-aviation Milan based top advisory firm which directly covers the EMEA arena and US. Dr. Jarach has significant decades-old experience in advising and working in close contact for and with governments, aircraft/engine manufacturers, OEM and MRO providers, airport companies, airport authorities & service providers, passenger & cargo airlines, aircraft lessors, couriers and investors involved in air transportation. He also covers the main aerospace, defense & military companies. Dr. Jarach is a member of the World Network Committee of Air Transport Research Society. He is also a Professor of Marketing at Bocconi University and a Senior Professor of Air Transport Marketing at SDA Bocconi School of Business, Milan. Dr. Jarach has written four books, dozens of academic articles and has contributed 100 of editorial pieces to major international newspapers and industry magazines about the aviation the industry. (This is me - Update Profile)
Opinions and analyses expressed in GLG News are solely those of the author. See the Terms of Use for details.
Both AF-KL and Air One look as second-best partners for Alitalia, LH would have been the best
December 12, 2007
Air France, Air One lead charge for Alitalia; Lufthansa opts out | www.atwonline.com
At the end of the process, only AF-KL and tiny Air One have remained as the alternatives for the Italian Government to go ahead with Alitalia's sale. It is however quite doubtful that any of the two ones are really good partners for the troubled Italian carrier, given their historical strategic fit (AF-KL) and their limited business range (Air One). Lufthansa, that decided to stay out, would have been the real best-in-class choice to turnaround the Italian carrier, provided a full support from politicians and unions that eventually the German carrier was probably not able to get.
Increasing complexity for European LCC industry
August 30, 2007
Are European low-cost carriers entering maturity in their revenue and profit generation? | www.ft.com
- profit warnings from European LCCs leaders (Ryanair, Easyjet, Air Berlin) evidence increasing difficulties in shareholders' value generation in the cluster of the airline industry; - on the other hand, smaller players, like Vueling, are expanding their losses; - consolidation looks as reasonable to offset overcapacity, stop a downward pressure over yield and to rejuvinate economies of scale;
Alitalia case as a minor actor in a major European airline industry shakeout
July 23, 2007
Italian Government has to find another solution for Alitalia | www.ft.com
After the collapse of the Alitalia's sale process, with the last one of original 10 bidders having abandoned the game, it's now time for tough choices for the Italian Government. The past months showed that there is really little financial interest on the international market for Alitalia, most definitely as the Italian airline faces strong structural inefficinces due to union powers, mismanagement and an obsolete fleet asset. Although the Italian carrier has still some liquidity into pockets, cash will be burst as on December next. The most likely solution will be a direct negotiation by the Italian Government, which still owns 49.9% of Alitalia, with some players like Air France, Lufthansa, TPG or Air One. As Air France is currently implementing a bid for Spain's Iberia, Lufthansa may surprisingly bid the first one to be contacted, most definitely as the German carrier has proved effective in managing a multi-hubbing strategy with its Frankfurt, Munich and Zurich hubs.
US Military budget improves Boeing profitability
May 7, 2007
Boeing earnings 12% above expectations | www.bloggingstocks.com
- Boeing is performing better than direct competitor Airbus in the civilian market, where B777s and B787s are winning competition over the A350 and where B747ng is also promising better than A380;
- In the military market, Boeing is benefiting from improvement of US military budget;
- MRO business and aircraft conversions (from passenger to cargo, i.e.) is also growing as well.
airports as major sources for investors' focus
October 30, 2006
airport marketing | www.aerlines.nl
. airports are traditional local monopolies;
. improved competition from either new comers or reconverted sites have taken innovators to reengineer their value proposition;
. state-of-the-art managerial solutions have a dramatic impact over EBITDA values;
. this transtion may be easily supported with advisory tools.
| Study Group Name | No. Members |
|---|---|
| Experts in the Leisure & Lodging Council | 4887 |
| Experts in the Automotive Council | 3422 |
| Airline and Aerospace Industry Experts: GLG Leaders and Scholars | 610 |
| Airline Industry Experts (EU) | 337 |
| Aircraft Leasing Professionals | 172 |
September 14, 2007 | London
GLGi: Low-cost Carriers in Europe