Japan Airlines Goes Bankrupt

Delta and American vie for piece of restructuring JAL
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jan 19, 2010 3:50 AM CST
Japan Airlines Goes Bankrupt
A man takes a photo of a Japan Airlines jet through a fence at Haneda Airport in Tokyo, Japan, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2010.   (Junji Kurokawa)

Japan Airlines filed for bankruptcy today in one of the nation's largest corporate failures, entering a restructuring from which it seeks to emerge leaner, smarter, and free of crippling debt. Asia's biggest carrier by revenue, staggering under a $25 billion debt mountain, JAL will slash nearly 16,000 jobs, cut routes, and shift to more fuel-efficient aircraft as part of its restructuring.

Government cash will keep JAL's planes in the air during the reorganization; its shares will be removed from the Tokyo Stock Exchange. Delta Air Lines and American Airlines are battling for a slice of JAL's business, with Delta and its SkyTeam partners offering $1 billion, including $500 million in cash, to lure JAL away from American's Oneworld alliance. American Airlines and its partners say they are ready to inject $1.4 billion cash into the Japanese airline.
(More Japan Airlines stories.)

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