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BA and AA offer concessions to keep their transatlantic JV – Government to accept

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As most HfP readers will know, British Airways, Iberia, Finnair, American Airlines and Aer Lingus run their transatlantic flights through a Joint Business Agreement.

Put simply, the five airlines put all the money from transatlantic ticket sales into a pot and share it out under a pre-agreed formula. They agree pricing between themselves. It makes zero difference to BA if you fly BA, American or Finnair – BA gets the same cut of your money regardless due to what is known as ‘metal neutrality’.

This obviously has repercussions for competition on transatlantic routes, which means that the UK Competition & Markets Authority (CMA) takes a regular look at what is going on.

British Airways American Airlines Joint Business Agreement

A full review of the Atlantic Joint Business Agreement was delayed due to the pandemic, with interim measures put in place until March 2026.

Slightly surprisingly, given the history of these negotiations, both sides are in agreement about what happens next.

British Airways and American Airlines have offered a number of changes to the agreement to mitigate areas which have begun to cause concern.

The CMA considers this offer to be reasonable and, whilst it is accepting counter-arguments until late April, has said that it is minded to accept.

What concessions have the airlines offered?

There are four city pairs when there are competition concerns:

  • London – Boston
  • London – Chicago
  • London – Dallas
  • London – Miami

This is where each route stands:

British Airways American Airlines Joint Business Agreement

London to Boston

Three groups operated daily non-stop flights on this route in Summer 2024: BA / AA (using four slots), Delta / Virgin Atlantic (using two slots handed over by BA/AA and one of their own) and JetBlue (using its own slots to provide one daily service from both Heathrow and Gatwick).

United and Norse no longer operate the route.

London to Chicago

Two groups operated daily non-stop flights on this route in Summer 2024: BA / AA (using seven slots) and United Airlines (using three slots).

No other airline with premium seating has operated between London and Chicago since 2016.

London to Dallas

AA and BA are the only airlines operating non-stop on the London – Dallas route.

This route is a cause of competition concern, given that Dallas is a key American Airlines hub where no other long haul carrier has a major presence.

London to Miami

Three groups operated daily non-stop flights on the London – Miami route in Summer 2024: BA / AA (using three slots), Delta / Virgin Atlantic (using one slot provided by BA/AA and one of their own) and Norse using its own slot at Gatwick.

This route is a cause of competition concern, given that Miami is a key American Airlines hub.

British Airways American Airlines Joint Business Agreement

What has the BA / AA / Iberia / Finnair / Aer Lingus JV offered?

The Atlantic Joint Business Agreement partners have offered the following concessions if the deal is allowed to continue for a further 10 years:

London to Boston

A pair of slots (for landing and departure) will be made available by BA or AA to any competitor which wishes to launch up to seven flights per week between either Heathrow or Gatwick and Boston.

The CMA is happy for this to go to Virgin / Delta or JetBlue if they want it. It does not need to go to a new entrant.

London to Chicago

BA and AA have offered a daily slot pair. The CMA is insisting that it is not given to United, which means that a new entrant should appear on the route. Whoever takes the slot must commit to offering daily direct flights during the summer and either non-stop or one-stop flights during the winter.

London to Dallas

There is a complex commitment here which forces BA and AA to carry a minimum number of ‘local’ passengers (ie passengers who do not connect further in Dallas or London). The requirement to sell a certain number of seats to passengers travelling only between London and Dallas is designed to keep prices low.

London to Miami

A pair of slots will be made available by BA or AA to any competitor which wishes to launch up to seven flights per week between either Heathrow or Gatwick and Miami.

The CMA is happy for this to go to Virgin / Delta if they want it. It does not need to go to a new entrant.

For all of these city pairs, among various other commitments is one concerning frequent flyer programmes. In the (admittedly unlikely) scenario that a slot went to a new entrant which did not have an established frequent flyer programme, it can force BA, AA, Iberia, Finnair and Aer Lingus to make it a partner in their programmes.

Conclusion

There are pros and cons to the Joint Business Agreements operated by BA / AA et al and Virgin / Delta et al, along with a similar Star Alliance one which doesn’t really impact the UK.

If you read the full CMA report here you can see why it is believed that there are good points – in particular around connections and options for flexible ticket holders to swap flights – as well as bad ones.

It seems virtually certain that the concessions offered by BA and AA will be accepted by the CMA, which will last for 10 years until the next review.


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Comments (46)

  • David says:

    Thanks, Rob, very helpful summary.

  • HampshireHog says:

    One slot pair on a route is meaningless. I’d be wary of booking on an airline with only one daily departure versus the incumbent with several. The CMA has obviously accepted the bare minimum offered by BA/AA what a toothless tiger.

    • JDB says:

      Have you read the report? What are you suggesting are the appropriate remedies/concessions that should be offered?

      • Ken says:

        Why should the JV still exist ?

        It began on the back of the 2008 financial crash and subsequent recession. Transatlantic travel fell by 15%.

        What might have been a sound argument then surely doesn’t last in perpetuity.

        I’m not sure why it should remain in place 20 years later.

        Perhaps you think regulators are the smartest guys in the room.

        All the evidence suggests they aren’t.

        • JDB says:

          @Ken – I haven’t said the regulators are the smartest guys in the room and they aren’t. However, they not only have plenty of evidence in front of them (which the armchair commentators here (who haven’t even read the report) don’t have) but they also receive objections/contrary evidence from objectors including other airlines and consumer groups.

          Clearly, these JVs have both positives and negatives for the consumer but the review of the evidence from all parties (by UK, US and EU regulators) has determined that, on balance, it’s neutral to good for the average passenger.

          • HampshireHog says:

            Don’t assume I haven’t read the report please. Whilst your very helpful contributions to folks problems are very welcome, your condescending tone to anyone who dares to disagree with you is frankly Trumpian in nature and unpleasantness

        • Novice says:

          Ken, are you sure the world is not headed for a markets crash and a recession?

          • kevin86 says:

            Yes the Trump slump/Trumpcession is almost certainly going to happen

    • JDB says:

      @HampshireHog – I appreciate it is more fun to criticise, but the CMA isn’t exactly considered a “toothless tiger” by business (unlike say the CAA) even to the extent that the chairman was recently sacked by the government as a more business friendly chair is wanted to support the government’s growth agenda.

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        So what you’re saying is Keith has kicked the teeth out of the CMA? Now they have a more ‘business friendly’ chair we expect them to just rubber stamp everything on the basis it’s good for growth

        • JDB says:

          I think you mean Keir? They have kicked out the chair and CEO of the FOS as well. Or one of them ‘resigned’ like the head of NHS England…more will follow!

    • Throwawayname says:

      Unless you are planning to use the flexibility (e.g. wanting to return earlier/later than scheduled from a work meeting), it makes no sense to use frequency as a criterion for picking between providers. IROPS can happen in multiple ways and there’s no guarantee that you’d be accommodated on a direct flight and/or in another way that minimises disruption.

  • OnTheRun says:

    Re London-Chicago route:

    “The CMA is insisting that it is not given to United”

    Interesting – genuine question – what is its reasoning for this?

    • John says:

      The issue raised is that there are only 2 effective airline on the route. As seen with the other routes identified as problematic they want 3 operators. As LON-BOS is fine with no new entrants just more flights on them.

    • Rhys says:

      Chicago is a hub for United and London is a hub for BA/AA.

  • Paul says:

    Competition died when this and others cartels were allowed. It’s time this was stopped and that airlines were again forced to compete. It impacts far more than which tin tube you travel on, it pervades into the frequent flyer programmes, credit card markets and even who Amex will let you transfer points to.

    • JDB says:

      What issues are you saying the transatlantic JV has on FF programmes, the credit card market or Amex transfer partners in the UK?

      • Paul says:

        You cannot transfer Amex rewards to AA. You cannot get a reward credit card for any airline in the JV. Here in the U.K. the only game in town is Avios given BA strangle hold on Heathrow and the absence of competitor of size offering both long and short haul travel. If you fly to FRA AMS and MXP regularly it is impossible to exploit an FFP other than Avios as only BA fly to all three, while other groupings fly to the others.
        Fares have soared under this legalised cartel, service has declined and the hard product, especially at BA has lagged behind. When they had to compete head to head in the 80/90s service and product was vastly better.

        • JDB says:

          What has the fact you can’t transfer Amex points to AA (a JV partner) have to do with the JV? You can transfer to some non JV partners. The absence of other airlines reward cards in the UK and Europe has nothing whatsoever to do with any JV but the economics of cards in a capped interchange world. Is the absence of open hotel reward credit cards also to do with the airline JVs?

          As for prices and service etc. have prices really “soared”? You should read the analysis. In terms of hard product, BA hasn’t lagged behind.

    • Tariq says:

      Even when the cartel isn’t organised, you just get ‘price following’ like BA and VS. What kind of competition is that?

  • Dwadda says:

    How is this not a cartel? Whenever there is reduced competition there is increased price. This whole arrangement is against the best interests of consumers. This should all go away. I am sure the make money on their other routes.. ..and I bet their margins on these cartel routes are higher. This is unjust.

    • Dwadda says:

      “in particular around connections and options for flexible ticket holders to swap flights” this affects a small minority of consumers, 0.01%. So, 99.9% of consumers have to suffer for the sake of corporate profits. That’s an anti-consumer reason.

      • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

        Source for those figures please.

        Connecting passengers make up far more than 0.01% of passengers.

      • Red_robbo says:

        Totally incorrect. Transfer passengers on BA transatlantic flights average out at around 50%, with some flights hitting 75-80%.
        I have 40 years experience in that very area.

    • JDB says:

      If you have evidence to support your assertions, you should provide it to the CMA which is accepting comments until 5pm on 23 April, but perhaps read the report first.

  • Dwadda says:

    “in particular around connections and options for flexible ticket holders to swap flights” this affects a small minority of consumers, 0.01%. So, 99.9% of consumers have to suffer for the sake of corporate profits. That’s an anti-consumer reason.

  • Nick P says:

    Who would have thought it, having a working business relationship and sharing nicely.

  • Douglas says:

    BA no longer fly direct London – Dallas .

    • Paul says:

      No but the revenue on every ticket sold by AA or BA or IB on that route is shared with the JV partners. The point of the JV is that the airline doesn’t have to fly the route to still get the money. Hardly a competitive environment.

    • John says:

      It is currently on hold because of aircraft issues at BA/AA but they will continue the service in the future. Classically Brits like to fly BA and Americans AA. On a route as high revenue offering your own metal can increase revenues to each airline in the margins.

      • Fennec says:

        By ‘Brits’ do you actually mean people living in and around the M25?

        As a non-M25 Brit, I quite happily regularly fly United.
        I’d also fly Delta (or AA) over BA any day of the week.

    • Rob says:

      Without wishing to repeat the entire article, they don’t need to because they get AA’s money. The data shown in Summer 2024.

      • LittleNick says:

        Somewhat annoying as you can’t use companion/upgrade vouchers to Dallas now.

    • Red_robbo says:

      They have only put a temporary halt on the route due to the Rolls-Royce engine issues on their 787 fleet. I would expect BA services to be resumed for the S.26 schedule.

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