Mega mergers always go so well for the consumer.
Probably will end up being a good indicator that China has every right to be concerned about a possible BHP-Rio Tinto Merger. That would be a company with staggering power.
What's the level of regulation in the US regarding these kinds of merger, i.e. a competition 'watchdog'?
What's the level of regulation in the US regarding these kinds of merger, i.e. a competition 'watchdog'?
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
~ Richard Feynman
if they work...ATG wrote:
Mega mergers always go so well for the consumer.
i find mergers where big companies acquire smaller companies work the best.
NWA?
for who?CoronadoSEAL wrote:
if they work...ATG wrote:
Mega mergers always go so well for the consumer.
i find mergers where big companies acquire smaller companies work the best.
well, eventually for consumers.ATG wrote:
for who?CoronadoSEAL wrote:
if they work...ATG wrote:
Mega mergers always go so well for the consumer.
i find mergers where big companies acquire smaller companies work the best.
it doesn't help anyone if the merge goes belly up and and/or suffers a major loss, and i'm pretty sure 7 out of 10 (big/big mergers) end up like this finding source
edit source:
US News and World Report (print edition, March 27, 2006). so even Kmarion might approve
no link - i have to type it, and you have to take my word for it:
this is just one section of the article:
...phewIt is no secret that the vast majority of mergers fail to deliver their intended benefits-about 70 percent, according to some estimates. What's incredible, though, are the sheer number of executives who keep trying them anyway. "everybody says they know the data but it's not going to happen to us." says Pfeffer. The bankers come knocking, the PowerPoints go up, the smell of blood is in the water, and companies close their eyes and take their leaps of faith. "if a doctor tells you that 70 percent of the time this is going to make things worse instead of better, and people keep doing it anyway, well,k that's crazy," says Sutton.
Most mergers fail to live up to expectations for one of three reasons: The companies are too similar in size (DaimlerChrysler), they are too geographically distant (SynOptics and Wellfleet Communications), or their cultural differences run too deep (AOL-TimeWarner). HP's merger with Compaq in 2001 is an example of the perfect storm: Two companies of roughly equal size, one in Silicon Valley and one in Houston, struggled mightily with their fundamentally different cultures. (One example: HP employees used voice mail to communicate; Compaq used E-mail. "so they literally couldn't talk to each other," says Sutton.) The result? A tailspin that resulted last year in the ousting of CEO Carly Fiorina.
Still, there are a few companies, like Cisco Systems, for example, that seem to be exceptions to this merger rule. Since 1993, Cisco has acquired a total of 108 companies without a major hiccup. Its secret? Senior managers have looked at what went right and wrong in other companies' mergers-and used the evidence to their benefit. They have avoided the pull of the big deal, focusing instead on smaller, targeted acquisitions. They have learned to trust their instincts: "When you're going through the negotiation process, it's like dating," says Dan Scheinman, the company's senior VP of corporate development. "if you don't like someone you're dating, getting married doesn't solve the problem." Most important, the company practices what it preaches: "A lot of companies treat [mergers] as an event: 'We did it; we've got the press conference; we're done,"" he says. "For us, we've got the acquisition, then the next step, then the next." Evidence-based management seems to work: Nearly half of the 10,000 eployees Cisco has acquired in the past 12 years have stayed with the company.
double edit: /facepalm - i just realized i had this in a Word. oh well - refined the 1337 typing skillz.
Last edited by CoronadoSEAL (2008-04-15 00:03:15)
word
yo bitchez STRAP YO FUCKIN AZZEZ IN TO YOU SEATS
WE FUCKIN LEAVING DIS JOINT YO
IF SHIT BE BOUNCING STAY IN YO SEAT
IF DIS PRESSURE BE SHIT, PUT YOU BITCH-AZZ MASK ON
I merge with who?
Why are 'Niggaz With Attitude' merging with an airline?
Has to be cleared through several government agencies like the SEC and such to ensure they aren't violating anti-trust laws.Spark wrote:
Probably will end up being a good indicator that China has every right to be concerned about a possible BHP-Rio Tinto Merger. That would be a company with staggering power.
What's the level of regulation in the US regarding these kinds of merger, i.e. a competition 'watchdog'?
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Where does it say it was FINAL? All it says is that shareholders approved it.
Just read this in the AJC thought you guys might like it if you havent read it already.
Planes:
Delta + Northwest Planes = 975 planes
American - 655
United - 578
Lufthansa - 526
Southwest - 521
Skywest - 436
Air France - KLM - 400
Continental - 367
US Airways - 357
Traffic:
These figures represent revenue passenger-kilometers
Delta + Northwest - 275.80 Billion
American - 224.33 Billion
United - 188.68 Billion
Air France - 123.46 Billion
Continental - 122.71 Billion
British Airways - 114.90 Billion
Lufthansa - 114.67 Billion
Southwest - 108.94 Billion
Japan Air Lines - 89.31 Billion
Passengers: All numbers are in MILLION
Delta + Northwest - 129.5
American - 99.8
Southwest - 96.3
United - 69.3
Lufthansa - 51.2
Air France - 49.4
All Nippon - 49.2
JAL - 48.9
China Southern - 48.5
Sales: All are in Billion and in USD
Delta + Northwest - 37.1
Lufthansa - 33.7
American -22.9
United - 20.1
British Airways - 17.3
Continental 0 13.8
US Airways - 11.7
Southwest - 9.9
Workers:
Delta + Northwest - 78,300
American - 73,300
United - 52,400
Continental - 36,100
Southwest - 34,100
US Airways - 32,800
SkyWest - 10,100
JetBlue - 10,100
Alaska - 9,900
Planes:
Delta + Northwest Planes = 975 planes
American - 655
United - 578
Lufthansa - 526
Southwest - 521
Skywest - 436
Air France - KLM - 400
Continental - 367
US Airways - 357
Traffic:
These figures represent revenue passenger-kilometers
Delta + Northwest - 275.80 Billion
American - 224.33 Billion
United - 188.68 Billion
Air France - 123.46 Billion
Continental - 122.71 Billion
British Airways - 114.90 Billion
Lufthansa - 114.67 Billion
Southwest - 108.94 Billion
Japan Air Lines - 89.31 Billion
Passengers: All numbers are in MILLION
Delta + Northwest - 129.5
American - 99.8
Southwest - 96.3
United - 69.3
Lufthansa - 51.2
Air France - 49.4
All Nippon - 49.2
JAL - 48.9
China Southern - 48.5
Sales: All are in Billion and in USD
Delta + Northwest - 37.1
Lufthansa - 33.7
American -22.9
United - 20.1
British Airways - 17.3
Continental 0 13.8
US Airways - 11.7
Southwest - 9.9
Workers:
Delta + Northwest - 78,300
American - 73,300
United - 52,400
Continental - 36,100
Southwest - 34,100
US Airways - 32,800
SkyWest - 10,100
JetBlue - 10,100
Alaska - 9,900
Have none of you ever heard of Northwest Airlines, or are you all being 'funny'?Braddock wrote:
Why are 'Niggaz With Attitude' merging with an airline?
Uh, you tell us "ghettoperson." lolghettoperson wrote:
Have none of you ever heard of Northwest Airlines, or are you all being 'funny'?Braddock wrote:
Why are 'Niggaz With Attitude' merging with an airline?
funny thing is it is still not final....flight attendant union is still holding it up. should be solved shortly however.chittydog wrote:
Where does it say it was FINAL? All it says is that shareholders approved it.
I prefer Pepsi.
oh look, 2 years, 10 months ago i gave a shit on these forums.