When it comes to airlines, the more available the better, right? When consumers have the opportunity to choose between a variety of airlines for their trip, they can usually find lower flight prices due to competition.
Well, there has been some recent good news in the interest of airline competition – David Neeleman, the founder of JetBlue, is launching his own airline. Here, our discount EWR parking company shares an article about it from USA Today:
“It’s official. The USA appears set to get a new start-up airline that will be launched by the founder of JetBlue.
Speculation about David Neeleman’s start-up carrier has mounted since news about the effort – currently dubbed “Moxy” in investor presentations – was first reported in June by trade publication Airline Weekly.
Now, Neeleman’s start-up has taken one of the most concrete steps yet toward getting off the ground: a tentative deal to buy 60 Airbus A220-300 jets. Airbus and Neeleman’s group announced a memorandum of understanding for the order on Tuesday at the Farnborough Airshow in England. A press release accompanying the news said the order was for “a new U.S. airline start-up.”
“After years of U.S. airline consolidation, the conditions are improving for a new generation of U.S. airline to emerge, focused on passenger service and satisfaction,” David Neeleman, majority investor in the new venture, said in the statement. “The A220 will enable us to serve thinner routes in comfort without compromising cost, especially on longer-range missions. With deliveries starting in 2021, we will have ample time to assemble a world-class management team and another winning business model.”
Neeleman has a venerable aviation background. In the U.S., he’s best known for launching JetBlue, which began flying in 2000.
But Neeleman also has helped found three other commercial carriers. In the 1980s, he helped launch Morris Air, which eventually was acquired by Southwest. In the 1990s, he was one of the founders of WestJet, now Canada’s second-biggest airline. And, after departing JetBlue, Neeleman founded Azul Brazilian Airlines in 2008. Neeleman remains CEO of Azul, now a major player in Brazil. Additionally, Neeleman has an ownership stake in TAP Air Portugal, which has expanded and updated its service offerings since.
The A220 aircraft selected by Moxy had been known as the Bomardier CSeries until last week. Airbus, which has taken a majority stake in the line, changed the name to fit within its standard naming convention.The A220-300s, which can seat between 140 and 160 passengers, are capable of flying transcontinental routes. They also have spacious overhead bins and a favorable 2-by-3 seating arrangement that minimizes the number of middle seats.
The A220 deal would be valued at $5.4 billion based on list prices, though steep discounts are typical for such orders.
As for Neeleman’s venture, it would aim to fill the gap left in the market as bigger airlines have consolidated. That’s left fewer carriers for U.S. customers to choose from and has increasingly forced customers flying on full-service carriers to connect via a shrinking number of increasingly busy hub airports.
“These guys have not been growing for a long time,” Neeleman said to Bloomberg News about the four big airlines that now dominate the U.S. market. “A lot of communities are underserved and fares are really high. There are pockets of pain everywhere. Globally, fuel is up but I have a very fuel-efficient airplane.”
Neeleman could find a market ready to embrace a new entrant. Of all the USA’s major carrier’s, the only one flying today that didn’t exist prior to 2000 is the JetBlue brand that Neeleman founded. Virgin America was founded in the 2000s, but that brand officially disappeared in April as part of its acquisition by Alaska Airlines.
Now, Neeleman has his latest effort with Moxy, though it’s unclear if that project name is being considered for the airline itself.
Regardless, Airline Weekly revealed some of the details of the venture’s plan, citing a Moxy presentation to investors that it gained access to. Under a headline reading, “He’s Baaack!,” the publication wrote the following about Neeleman’s plans on June 18:
“According to the presentation, the startup sees big opportunity in smallish airports, detecting consumer frustration with increasingly congested mega-hubs in regions like the U.S. northeast and west coast. Consolidation, it says, has reduced options while creating a “comfortable oligopoly” of carriers with high fares and higher-than ever profits.”
“Moxy seems keen on secondary airports in the country’s biggest metro areas like Boston, New York, Washington, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Providence, outside Boston, features prominently as an example in Moxy’s presentation.”
Among the airports mentioned as prospective destinations in the report, according to Airline Weekly, were places like Providence; Orlando Sanford; St. Petersburg, Florida; Phoenix-Mesa; McClellan-Palomar near San Diego; Newburgh/Stewart, New York and Trenton, New Jersey, among others.
It’s unclear how serious Moxy would be about going into the airports listed in its presentation – several currently have no commercial service – but it underscores Neeleman’s vision of bringing high-end economy service while undercutting fares of major rivals.”