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Richard Purser Purser: The Great Duopoly
Written by Richard Purser   
One thing that seems certain about the Canadian airline industry is that a country with our population base cannot support more than two major airlines. A one-time potential third major airline, Wardair, disappeared in 1989, leaving Canada with only two: Air Canada and Canadian Airlines International. Then CAI disappeared in 2001, leaving it open to question whether Canada could support even two major carriers. But by then WestJet Airlines was five years old and on the way up. Today, after another halfdecade, WestJet has proven its staying power while all other potential contenders have fallen by the wayside.

But the airline road is rocky even for the biggest players; witness Air Canada’s recent battle with bankruptcy. And witness the US; it has more than nine times Canada’s population, but does that mean it can support 18 major airlines? Hardly. At the time this is being written it has only seven – and a couple of those could soon disappear through consolidation. CAI suffered from trying to be an Air Canada equivalent (only better); WestJet prospers by going its own way.

WestJet so far has maintained a simple corporate structure, but Air Canada has become big and complicated enough to go the holding-company route. For nearly four decades we have had to read media references not just to United Airlines but to “UAL Corp.’s United Airlines,” and for a quarter of a century we have had to read not just of American Airlines but of “AMR Corp.’s American Airlines.” (AMR Corp. has 10 subsidiaries beside American Airlines, but the only one the average reader is likely to have heard of is American Eagle, the feeder airline; UAL Corp. has eight subsidiaries which in turn hold a host of sub-subsidiaries.)

Now, but only since 2004 as it emerged from bankruptcy, Air Canada is a unit of ACE Aviation Holdings Inc., as is Air Canada Jazz, the regional carrier, which would actually be Canada’s second biggest airline if it were spun off. Jazz has its own president/CEO, Joseph Randell, as has Air Canada itself, Montie Brewer. But far better known than both is Robert Milton, the former CEO of Air Canada who brought the airline through its struggle for survival. He is now chairman, president and CEO of ACE, the holding company. He remains chairman of Air Canada.

As for just who runs what in a structure like this – well, we’ll just have to wait until Brewer (who was formerly executive VP, commercial) and Randell (who formerly headed Air Nova, which joined with AirBC, Air Ontario and Canadian Regional Airlines to form Air Canada Jazz) write their memoirs. Or until Milton writes the second volume of his.

As Brewer explained to a New York investor conference on Dec. 7, according to the Financial Post’s Chris Sorensen, investors and analysts don’t yet fully understand Air Canada’s relationship to its new parent, ACE. Brewer was dealing with an unanticipated drop in Air Canada’s share price following a Nov. 17 initial public offering in which 25% of ACE’s stake in Air Canada was sold. There had previously been successul IPOs of ACE units Jazz and Aeroplan, and another subsidiary, Air Canada Technical Services, is likely to be sold outright.

Life is simpler at WestJet, but not entirely simple. Remember the espionage episode of 2003-04, when WestJet management downloaded proprietary Air Canada data? The caper was discovered and WestJet had to issue a costly apology to Air Canada – and to Milton personally last May 29.

To most of us, that put the matter to rest. But the Globe and Mail got hold of some of the gory details and published them spectacularly early in October. So far, so good; that’s what journalism does. But the newspaper decided to editorialize. Noting that chairman/CEO Clive Beddoe had already given up his additional title of president (to Sean Durfy, former executive VP, marketing and sales) as part of a succession plan, it suggested that the board of directors “consider speeding up the timetable set by the company founder to relinquish the last of his executive responsibilities.” A follow-up editorial compared the WestJet situation to the loss of “moral compass” by the board of Hewlett- Packard in a US corporate governance case.

But the media at large failed to pick this stuff up and run with it, and the public appears to consider the case closed. WestJet’s business and stock are both riding high.