Friday, October 1, 2010

Southwest used "Cowboy" code name to mask AirTran talks

Southwest Airlines Co. Chief Executive Officer Gary Kelly set in motion the largest purchase in the carrier’s 39-year history by setting up a meeting that he thought might backfire.

His conversation with AirTran Holdings Inc. CEO Bob Fornaro in a suburban Dallas hotel in May began five months of talks that ended in the Sept. 27 announcement that Southwest would buy the company for $1.4 billion in cash and stock. Fornaro came expecting to discuss a marketing alliance, Kelly said.

“I just picked up the phone and called Bob,” Kelly, 55, said in an interview at Southwest’s Dallas headquarters. “I was purposely vague. I said, ‘Do you want to sit down and explore what we can do together?’ It wasn’t until we actually met in person a couple of weeks later that I laid out what I wanted to talk about. I didn’t know if he’d get up and leave or not.”

The acquisition was Kelly’s solution to the puzzle of how to move past a self-imposed halt to seating-capacity growth that would have been the longest dormant period since the airline started flying in 1971.

“In hindsight, the timing was perfect,” said Ray Neidl, an analyst at Maxim Group LLC in New York. “Nine months ago, the economic situation wasn’t as stable. Everyone was still in a state of shock with the financial system and the economy and there was talk of a double-dip recession. Now we know that they started looking at it in the spring” as travel began reviving.

Football Theme

Southwest, the biggest discount carrier, and AirTran held meetings in Atlanta and New York, and referred to themselves in documents and e-mail by code names, so any outsider seeing the references couldn’t identify the companies.

Southwest was “Cowboy” after its hometown National Football League team, while AirTran was “Falcon,” for the NFL franchise in Atlanta. AirTran’s biggest operations are in Atlanta, the only major U.S. city that Southwest doesn’t serve and the centerpiece of the acquisition.

“Secrecy and avoiding leaks was absolutely paramount,” Fornaro, 57, said yesterday in an interview.

The deal celebrated by Southwest executives with a shot of tequila at their offices at Dallas Love Field started taking shape over iced tea when Kelly and Fornaro sat down at the Westin Stonebriar hotel in Frisco, a drive of about 40 minutes north of downtown Dallas.

“I didn’t know what the subject was,” said Fornaro, who became CEO at the Orlando, Florida-based carrier in November 2007. “I was really kind of guessing.”

Kelly said Fornaro left that first get-together without giving an answer. The AirTran CEO later called back to say that while the airline wasn’t for sale, “they would be willing to entertain an acquisition by Southwest,” said Kelly, who has run the discount carrier since 2004.

July Offer

The two sides signed a non-disclosure agreement in June, followed by Southwest’s first offer in July, according to the airlines. Discussions on the terms began in August and September, Fornaro said.

“Both parties are stubborn and good negotiators,” Kelly said.

AirTran, the eighth-largest U.S. airline by traffic, was already the subject of analysts’ commentary as a likely candidate for consolidation.

With Delta Air Lines Inc. buying Northwest Airlines Corp. in 2008 and the merger closing today between UAL Corp.’s United Airlines and Continental Airlines Inc., Wall Street has been watching for more deals, because bigger networks help carriers win more passengers. Southwest is No. 5 in the U.S. by traffic.

‘Added Urgency’

“The competitive backdrop absolutely added urgency for AirTran to somehow become a stronger airline, and that wasn’t going to happen through organic growth,” said Dan McKenzie, a Hudson Securities analyst in Chicago who recommends buying Southwest and AirTran. Maxim’s Neidl doesn’t rate the airlines.

AirTran fell 13 percent this year through Sept. 24, the fourth-worst performance among the 12 carriers in the Bloomberg U.S. Airlines Index, compared with a 7.4 percent gain for Southwest.

Southwest had made only two previous acquisitions since founders Herb Kelleher and Rollin King drew up the airline’s original routes on a cocktail napkin in 1967, buying Muse Air in 1985 and Morris Air in 1993. Both deals were overseen by Kelleher, who stepped down as CEO in 2001 and chairman in 2008.

As the AirTran talks unfolded, Kelly consulted with Kelleher, 79, who maintains an office at Southwest while no longer being involved in the company’s operations. He declined to be interviewed.

‘Sounding Board’

“For me, he is a wonderful adviser and counselor and sounding board,” said Kelly, who has worked at Southwest since 1986. “You can assume he’s given me good, sound advice on this deal, too.”

At AirTran, only seven or eight people knew about the negotiations before the middle of last week, Fornaro said.

The final approvals came on Sept. 26, a Sunday, with votes by both airlines’ boards. Fornaro said he and general counsel Steve Rossum then flew to Dallas, where Southwest employees worked past midnight to clear the way for a statement to be issued before 6 a.m. local time the next day.

Kelly gave Fornaro a model of a Boeing Co. 737, the only plane type in Southwest’s fleet. Fornaro presented Kelly with a model of one of AirTran’s Boeing 717s painted in the black-and- red livery of the Atlanta Falcons, a nod to the carrier’s code name.

Pen Exchange

Fornaro said he also received a “nice” metal Southwest pen from Kelly, and “I gave him a plastic AirTran pen.”

Each AirTran share will be exchanged for $3.75 in cash and 0.321 share of Southwest common stock. Including AirTran debt and capitalized aircraft operating leases, the value is about $3.4 billion, the airlines said. The Southwest subsidiary created for the deal is Guadalupe Holdings Corp., in honor of a conference room where some of the talks were held.

The combined airline will keep Southwest’s name, headquarters and aircraft paint scheme, as well as policies such as accepting two checked bags without a fee and not assigning seats.

For Southwest, the deal brings gates in Atlanta, the world’s busiest airport, along with the route system of a profitable partner and the opportunity to expand in both New York and Washington.
Southwest also secured 86 smaller jets -- something it’s toyed with adding for at least a decade -- an international network and a compelling reason to consider ordering the Boeing 737-800, its largest plane ever.

“Here we’ve found the key,” Kelly said. “We can buy AirTran, which brings with it profits and, in addition to that, we can tune our two companies together and generate more profits. We were determined to find a way to restart our growth plan.”


(Mary Schlangenstein - Bloomberg Transportation News)

No comments: