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Have we been taken for a ride by the new Monarch Airlines?

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Ten days ago, we ran this article about the proposed relaunch of UK holiday airline Monarch.

As I said at the time, I was very surprised to see this story pop up from nowhere over a weekend. However, the chairman of the new company, Daniel Ellingham, gave interviews to Airways and AviationSource and it didn’t seem too crazy.

Given what Global Airlines is currently doing, the goals for the new Monarch seemed perfectly sane (albeit unachievable in my view) in comparison ….

Have we been taken for a ride by the new Monarch Airlines?

Yesterday it seemed to come crashing down. This message appeared on the letsmonarch.co.uk website, which has been taken down overnight:

It is with immense regret that we announce today that we have been forced to put the brakes on our process to relaunch Monarch.  This is not a decision that we have taken lightly, however since taking over the business two weeks ago we have drawn close to exhausted the start-up funding provided to us far more rapidly than anticipated.

We have been seeking alternative routes, such as partial divestment of share capital, and will continue to do so, however at the current stage there is no practical option to move forward in the immediate future.

This is slightly bizarre. After all, launching an airline doesn’t come cheap – how have they spent their initial capital in 10 days?

But now it gets weird ….

This is Monarch chairman Daniel Ellingham, as per his LinkedIn image (now deleted):

Have we been taken for a ride by the new Monarch Airlines?

Here is a US politician called John Driscoll, who ran for the US Senate in Montana in 2020:

Have we been taken for a ride by the new Monarch Airlines?

Let’s look at Ellingham’s CV.

As per my original article, his last major role was at hygiene group PHS between 2013 and 2016 when he was a member of the Supervisory Board.

PHS effectively went bust in October 2014, which would be 16 months after Ellingham joined, and was taken over by its lenders. There is no sign of Ellingham on the main board and no sign that there was ever a Supervisory Board pre- or post-financial restructuring. The shareholders were represented as NED’s on the main board and – in the UK – Supervisory Boards are rare.

His airline experience is listed as a Board Advisor to Swissair (1991-1999) and Austrian (2003-2005). There is nothing in his published CV to explain what qualified him for such a role.

Earlier yesterday afternoon, before the statement above was published, the website said the following for a short period:

We have been approached with new options to continue launching Monarch.  We hope to bring more positive news to you shortly.

Monarch’s Chairman is to step down and be replaced with immediate effect. We are working tirelessly and will continue to do so.

Is this all nonsense?

Someone with a bit of basic web skill could have paid a tenner for letsmonarch.co.uk (which, as I said in my original article, is a weird domain for multiple reasons) and created a simple landing page which basically said ‘coming soon’.

The person who originally tweeted about the existence of the landing page is a respected breaker of airline news on X. Perhaps he was tipped off?

A bigger question is who gave the interviews to Airways and AviationSource, and what checks did they make? There was also a later interview by Ellingham with FINN, the website for the Farnborough international air show.

More interestingly, who designed the new Monarch livery, pictured above, which was put on its website last week?

If it is all nonsense, it was well put together nonsense. The media interviews contained lots of unachievable guff, especially regarding timelines, but no worse than we’ve heard from other airline start-up founders. Ellingham’s CV was thin but any more detail would have made it easier to check. The website was well done – creating a credible looking website, even if its just a holding page, isn’t easy.

Actual companies were created and registered at Companies House, together with lists of directors. Ellingham was appointed back in January, at the same time as letsmonarch.co.uk was registered and the X/Twitter account launched. There was a Karolina Cherney who was appointed at Company Secretary on the 18th and resigned yesterday after 13 days. Companies House shows that Ellingham had no previous UK company directorships despite his extensive CV.

Will we get to the bottom of this, or will the people involved quietly fade away?

Comments (126)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Bernard says:

    LOL
    It certainly fooled the 12 year olds on flyertalk. Hahaha
    Probably the same acne ridden kids who think Euroflyer is for sale.

  • Novice says:

    I think Rob should really write more articles like this because the level of response is great for his business and we all love playing armchair detectives so it’s a win for everyone.

  • Ironside says:

    Been in meetings all morning and have only just fired up HfP. Did I miss much…?

  • Peter Mc says:

    They probably got an invoice from the supermarket by the runway in Gibraltar for the advert for Monarch that is still painted on the wall.

  • Rich says:

    Did I miss it or has nobody yet mentioned Martin Halstead and Varsity Airlines from a few years ago?

    Part fantasist, part fake it till you make it. I think he actually did manage to carry passengers on a few flights (on a wet lease) on the rather niche route of OXF-NCL-EDI, before collapsing.

    • sigma421 says:

      Wasn’t that also his second go at such a project? I think he’d previously had an airline called alphaOne which was meant to fly OXF-CBG. He was 18 at the time if I recall correctly. It also received a lot of fairly uncritical coverage from the specialist press.

  • Kevin says:

    Cowboys Ted. They’re a bunch of cowboys.

  • Londonsteve says:

    I wonder how much money the perpetrator of all this made off with? I never worked in VC so I don’t know what’s realistic seed capital for something like this.

    Wouldn’t they have to transfer the funds to a ‘real’ bank account belonging to a known individual that’s undergone KYC in order to access the cash? Or they spent it straight out of the business bank account on paying ‘invoices’ by making transfers to the accounts of dubious companies that are related to the wider scam ecosystem or even set up especially in anticipation of the seed capital needing to be withdrawn pronto?

    I’m endlessly fascinated that while I’m living my life seeking to avoid getting a parking ticket or a speeding fine, others are spending their waking hours working out elaborate ways to defraud the rest of us and sleep perfectly soundly at night having succeeded.

    • Rob says:

      It’s not about money. It was done purely for fun.

      There is a hint in one of the LinkedIn CVs that those involved are part of a ‘virtual airline’ online community (ie a group who get together and pretend to run an airline – apparently this stuff exists.)

      You would never in a million years raise real money using fake people to front your venture.

      • meta says:

        @Rob Billy McFarland, Anna Sorokin both raised quite a lot of money. Anna Sorokin created a fake person entirely, went to prison and got a Netflix series out of it for which Netflix paid her more than she defrauded others even though later it had to be spent on reparations.

        It’s not hard to imagine at all and I am sure with proliferation of AI and how easy it has become to steal someone’s identity, some fraudsters will do it one day soon….

    • John says:

      It’s not hard to avoid getting speeding tickets… And the majority of private parking operators don’t follow the law in issuing their “tickets” so you can easily get out of them

      • david says:

        yeeee-hawwwwww!!!! proper cowboys.

      • Londonsteve says:

        I don’t find it hard to avoid speeding tickets and parking fines. Can’t remember the last time I got either, I was merely expressing that I’m a law abiding individual whereas we’re seemingly surrounded by monumental quantities of grifters and bulls***ers these days intent on ripping us off.

        Having said that, Rob explained above this was done for a giggle and not for cash which makes it altogether better and actually rather entertaining.

  • Bernard says:

    It’s telling how The Times ran the story and was clearly too lazy to fact check.
    Also hearing Barcap’s airline guy wrote about it too. He didn’t check his sources either it seems. Just one big loop of being duped.
    Makes you wonder how credible the other stuff newspapers or Barclays report on is?

    • Rob says:

      Once you become an expert in a particular field and start to realise what % of newspaper content written about that field is nonsense, you realise that much of the rest is probably nonsense too ….

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