British travel company Thomas Cook Group plc has filed for insolvency in the night from Sunday to Monday. All booked trips, flights and holidays have been cancelled. (www.ifn.news) 更多...
179 yr old company and no one stepped up to try and help?? BS companies get bailed out everyday, but it appears no one cared enough for approx. 600,000 customers and 22,000 employees. Then you read this and realize the greed of money is the do all that ends all.
"Not everyone lost out with the collapse of 178-year-old Thomas Cook Group Plc that put 21,000 jobs at risk and left travelers around the world stranded. Speculators including Sona Asset Management and XAIA Investment GmbH stand to earn as much as $250 million from the bankruptcy. They invested in derivatives that pay out when a company defaults. The fate of those securities was at the heart of the battle over whether Thomas Cook lived or died." Hope this info gets into the right hands and companies like this, tank.
Peter Fankhauser, the company's chief executive, apologized on Monday, adding that all attempts had been made to avoid liquidation. The operator had been looking for €226 million ($250 million) from investors to save it from insolvency. "We have worked exhaustively in the past few days to resolve the outstanding issues on an agreement to secure Thomas Cook's future," said Fankhauser. "Although a deal had been largely agreed, an additional facility requested in the last few days of negotiations presented a challenge that ultimately proved insurmountable.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the UK government should not bail out Thomas Cook, arguing that doing so would create a "moral hazard" because other firms might expect similar treatment in the future.
I wish reports wouldn't say that travellers are "stranded". They're not. The government has put a repatriation program into place to bring those who are on a Thomas Cook holiday, home. If you flew out on the Sunday before they went bust, and you're on a two-week holiday, you'll be flown home on the day you were meant to fly home. You will still have your holiday.
Nope. Travellers are responsible for their own insurance. For example, ATOL: "Air Travel Organiser's Licence" -- a UK financial protection scheme that safeguards most air package holidays sold by travel businesses that are based in the UK.
Through Oct 6, repatriation is being handled by the UK Civil Aviation Authority, the UK regulator.
The CAA will arrange return flights for ATOL-protected travelers currently abroad who were planning to fly back to the UK with Thomas Cook.
Travelers returning after October 6 will have to book their own flights back. But, if they are ATOL-protected they will be reimbursed for the cost of the new flight.
UK bankruptcy system is very different from the US Chapter 11 system. Basically, when a company fails it sinks and disappears.
It had 33 aircraft, 24 newish A321, seven A330-200s which will become available for use as soon as the administrator has their hands on them. Plus two 757-200.
Their You tube channel is still there if you want to look at their aircraft.
If you look at the graph of 12 years of profits and loses, it's always swung back and forth. Then 2019 hit, and it tanked, with huge losses. They just couldn't cut costs fast enough. They're blaming it on self bookings of hotels and airfare, but that's been around for years. Will be interesting to see the final financials as to what really happened.
Sir Richard Branson lays much of the blame on the devaluation of the British Pound over Brexit fears and economic uncertainty. It has become much more costly for British airlines to buy fuel, and when you're operating with extremely slim margins, it doesn't take much of a devaluation to slip into the red.
Before anyone else says that Condor isnt flying because Thomas Cook group went bankrupt They are wrong. Condor is still flying to this day and is looking for a loan from a German Bank. Please see the link below.
Driven to the wall by the Royal Bank of Scotland! The UK Government bailed out RBS to ther tune of $45.5BILLION but wouldn't lend Thomas Cook £200 MILLION which the RBS were demanding as CONTINGENCY> Ashamed of the Government and can't wait for RSBS to go bust!
Perhaps RBS learned that throwing good money after bad is rarely the recipe for success. Why didn't the Bank of England step in and save the day? After all, BoE has much deeper pockets than RBS.
get the chip off your shoulder fe RBS Nothing to do with them but with the terrible mismanagement of TC these past few years and the creaming off of millions in directors bonuses ! Writing has been on the wall for years as they begged, borrowed and scraped loans and more loans ..Oh yes the Directors made sure they would be ok knowing what was coming!
National Florida Airlines December 1, 1983 Excellair July 7, 1984 Oceanaire Lines February 10, 1984 Connectaire October 10, 1984 Princeton Air Link August 11, 1988 Air Kentucky July 19, 1989 Eastern Air Lines January 18, 1991 Northcoast Executive January 29, 1991 Midway Airlines (1976-1991) November 27, 1991 L’Express February 2, 1992 Eastwind Airlines September 30, 1999 Sun Country Airlines January 2, 2002 Midway Airlines (1993-2003) October 30, 2003 Southeast Airlines December 1, 2004 TransMeridian Airlines September 29, 2005 Independence Air January 6, 2009 Big Sky January 7, 2008 Aloha Airlines March 31, 2008 Air Midwest May 14, 2008 Gemini Air Cargo August 12, 2008 Direct Air April 12, 2012 Comair April 4, 2012 Evergreen International Airlines December 31, 2013
Chapter 11 - only 15 came back
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Another copy and paste, " The General Motors plant was in North Tarrytown, now Sleepy Hollow, but was often listed as the G.M. Assembly Division, Tarrytown, New York. During World War II the assembly plant was retooled to make wings for grumman torpedo bombers and was named Eastern Aircraft employing 10,000 workers, 2,900 of the workers were women."
"Not everyone lost out with the collapse of 178-year-old Thomas Cook Group Plc that put 21,000 jobs at risk and left travelers around the world stranded.
Speculators including Sona Asset Management and XAIA Investment GmbH stand to earn as much as $250 million from the bankruptcy.
They invested in derivatives that pay out when a company defaults. The fate of those securities was at the heart of the battle over whether Thomas Cook lived or died." Hope this info gets into the right hands and companies like this, tank.