cageyjames wrote:They have not been able to compete in California. Only long haul routes to JFK.
They are not based in California. Virgin America will be.
cageyjames wrote:As I said, price is the main driving factor in the USA. They can try but unless they are at the same price point as WN, they won't suceed out west. HP learned this and B6 has learned this and stayed out of the Western USA.
Sorry but Ryanair is much cheaper than Southwest and yet EasyJet (which may also be cheaper than Southwest) have managed to compete with them and found space in the market between BA and Ryanair.
cageyjames wrote:WN dominates the leasure marketplace so that is out and cost concioius business travelers will stick with what they are using.
You are too confident of your own forecasts. Have you ever run an airline? No. However Virgin have founded profitable airlines all over the world.
cageyjames wrote:UL and AA pretty much match WN out west so there isn't any wiggle room for VA.
But Virgin American can take business from the established carriers. And neither United or American have California as their main base.
cageyjames wrote:Plus both offer premium cross country flights that B6 or VA won't be able to match.
Why not? American and United have ageing fleets and union problems. I don't see them as being omnipotently competitive. Virgin Atlantic certainly takes them on over the Atlantic.
cageyjames wrote:That is in Europe, not the USA.
So what? The model might succeed in the US too. Europe's aviation industry has become very innovative and competitive and EasyJet is an example of that. If Virgin replicate their model in the US then it will likely succeed.
cageyjames wrote:At what cost to existing airlines? Do you wish to see Alaska, Frontier or ATA go away?
Like I said before I wish to see the market decide what airlines go away or succeed. If Alaska, Fronteir, ATA etc can't hack competiton from Virgin then they should go out of business. That's how competitive markets work to deliver the choice that customers want.
cageyjames wrote:The USA market is different.
No it's not. Passengers want more or less the same things everywhere.
cageyjames wrote:Ask UA or WN about flying out of SFO. Both have given up because of the weather. If they were going to use a different airport I might give them a chance. They picked SFO because they won't have to compete against other low cost airlines. Once they leave that protected market, they'll be toast.
Virgin Atlantic already use SFO and the Virgin stable operates profitable airlines in all manner of weather conditions all over the world.
cageyjames wrote:Plus San Francisco already is used to taking BART to Oakland to take WN.
As I said before I think Virgin America will offer a differentiated product from Southwest.
cageyjames wrote:I've already said that they should allow more foreign ownership of airlines. How about Virgin invests in an existing airline instead of starting from scratch?
How about Virgin being allowed to choose their own strategy?
cageyjames wrote:And damn the consequences to existing companies.
Absolutely yes. That's a fundamental rule of free and competitive markets. The market chooses the winners and losers. Incumbants should not be protected from competition.
Sorry but your arguments are just thinly disguised justifications for protectionism.