Senin, 23 September 2019

Tour company Thomas Cook collapses, 150,000 people stranded - USA TODAY

LONDON – British tour company Thomas Cook collapsed early Monday after failing to secure emergency funding, leaving tens of thousands of vacationers stranded abroad.

The British government said the return of the 178-year-old firm’s 150,000 British customers now in vacation spots across the globe would be the largest repatriation in its peacetime history. The process began Monday and officials warned that delays are inevitable.

The Civil Aviation Authority said Thomas Cook has ceased trading, its four airlines will be grounded, and its 21,000 employees in 16 countries, including 9,000 in the U.K., will lose their jobs. The company several months ago had blamed a slowdown in bookings because of Brexit uncertainty for contributing to its crushing debt burden.

The company had said Friday it was seeking 200 million pounds ($250 million) to avoid going bust and was in weekend talks with shareholders and creditors to stave off failure. The firm, whose airliners were a familiar sight in many parts of the world, also operated around 600 U.K. travel stores.

The company’s chief executive, Peter Fankhauser, said in a statement read outside the company’s offices Monday morning that he deeply regrets the shutdown.

“Despite huge efforts over a number of months and further intense negotiations in recent days we have not been able to secure a deal to save our business,” he said. “I know that this outcome will be devastating to many people and will cause a lot of anxiety, stress and disruption.”

Britain’s CAA said it had arranged an aircraft fleet for the complex British repatriation effort, which is expected to last two weeks.

More: Captain spilled coffee on plane control panel, had to divert transatlantic flight, report says

“Due to the significant scale of the situation, some disruption is inevitable, but the Civil Aviation Authority will endeavor to get people home as close as possible to their planned dates,” the aviation authority said in a statement.

Describing the repatriation plan, British Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said dozens of charter planes, from as far afield as Malaysia, had been hired to fly customers home free of charge. He said hundreds of people were staffing call centers and airport operations centers.

“The task is enormous, the biggest peacetime repatriation in U.K. history. So there are bound to be problems and delays,” he said.

British travel expert Simon Calder told Sky News that Thomas Cook’s problems started in 1994 when the “open skies” agreement allowed upstarts easyJet and Ryanair to flourish. At the same time, he said, the internet became widely used for travel bookings, lessening the demand for Thomas Cook’s travel agencies.

“There’s still of course a place for travel professionals, there’s a place for the package already, as companies like Jet2 and TUI are demonstrating, but Thomas Cook was behind the curve and I’m afraid with high costs such as those expensive high street premises they simply couldn’t cope,” he said.

Traveler Lucy Jessop from the eastern city of Hull said she had been scheduled to return from Mexico to Manchester with Thomas Cook on Tuesday and that the government had organized an alternative flight back to England.

She said she was initially worried by the collapse and praised the government’s quick action.

“It’s the employees of Thomas Cook and all those due to go on holiday I feel for,” she said. “We were the lucky ones, I suppose.”

Unions representing the Thomas Cook staff had urged the British government to intervene to prop up Thomas Cook to protect jobs and the traveling public.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the government was right not to bail out the company, arguing that travel firms should do more to ensure they don’t collapse.

Johnson said the government would help bring home the stranded British travelers. But he said bailing out the company would have established “a moral hazard” because other firms might later expect the same treatment.

“We need to look at ways in which tour operators one way or another can protect themselves from such bankruptcies in future,” Johnson said. “One is driven to reflect on whether the directors of these companies are properly incentivized to sort such matters out.”

Most of Thomas Cook’s British customers are protected by the government-run travel insurance program, which makes sure vacationers can get home if a British-based tour operator fails while they are abroad.

An earlier repatriation exercise following the 2017 collapse of Monarch Airlines cost the government about 60 million pounds. The Thomas Cook effort is much larger and likely to be far more costly.

Travelers holding reservations with Thomas Cook were told not to go to the airport because all flights had been canceled.

Thomas Cook, which began in 1841 with a one-day train excursion in England and now operates in 16 countries, has been struggling over the past few years. It only recently raised 900 million pounds ($1.12 billion), including receiving money from leading Chinese shareholder Fosun.

An estimated 1 million future travelers will find their bookings for upcoming holidays cancelled. They are likely to receive refunds under the terms of the government’s travel insurance plan.

In May, the company reported a debt burden of 1.25 billion pounds and cautioned that political uncertainty related to Britain’s scheduled departure from the European Union at the end of October had hurt demand for summer holiday travel. Heat waves over the past couple of summers in Europe have also led many people to stay at home, while higher fuel and hotel costs have weighed on the travel business.

The company’s troubles were already affecting those traveling under the Thomas Cook banner.

A British vacationer told BBC radio on Sunday that the Les Orangers beach resort in the Tunisian town of Hammamet, near Tunis, demanded that guests who were about to leave pay extra money, for fear it wouldn’t be paid what it is owed by Thomas Cook.

Ryan Farmer said many tourists refused the demand, since they had already paid Thomas Cook, so security guards shut the hotel’s gates and “were not allowing anyone to leave.”

It was like “being held hostage,” said Farmer, who is due to leave Tuesday. He said he would also refuse to pay if the hotel asked him.

The Associated Press called the hotel, as well as the British Embassy in Tunis, but no officials or managers were available for comment.

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Associated Press writer Jill Lawless in New York contributed to this report.

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/2019/09/23/thomas-cook-collapses-150-000-people-stranded/2416554001/

2019-09-23 07:23:00Z
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US stocks to start the week higher on reduced trade tensions - Fox Business

U.S. equity futures were indicating a higher open on Monday when trading begins on Wall Street as trade tensions ease.

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Dow Industrial futures are 0.1 percent higher, S&P 500 futures are gaining 0.1 percent and Nasdaq futures are adding 0.2 percent.

Optimism increased over the weekend as the U.S. and China referred to last week's talks as "productive" and "constructive."

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A higher-level round of talks is still scheduled to go ahead in October.

Wall Street ended last week with losses, snapping a 3-week winning streak for the S&P 500 after reports emerged that Chinese officials canceled a planned trip to farms in Montana and Nebraska.

TickerSecurityLastChange%Chg
I:DJIDOW JONES AVERAGES26935.07-159.72-0.59%
SP500S&P 5002992.07-14.72-0.49%
I:COMPNASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX8117.674437-65.20-0.80%

The S&P 500 fell 0.5 percent, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.6 percent and the Nasdaq lost 0.8 percent.

In Asian trading on Monday, the Shanghai Composite index closed down 1.1 percent while Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.8 percent after yet another weekend of violent protests.Tokyo's markets were closed for a holiday.

Fosun Tourism Group, the biggest shareholder in Thomas Cook, fell 3.8 percent in Hong Kong after the 178-year-old British tour company collapsed.

Bookings for more than 600,000 global vacationers were canceled Monday as a result.

Shanghai-based Fosun International dropped 1 percent.

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Britain's Civil Aviation Authority said Thomas Cook's four airlines would be grounded and its 21,000 employees in 16 countries, including 9,000 in the UK, will lose their jobs.

In Europe, London's FTSE was off 0.2 percent, Germany's DAX was down 1 percent and France's CAC lost 0.7 percent.

The Associated Press contributed to this article.

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https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/us-stocks-sept-23-2019

2019-09-23 06:26:47Z
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Minggu, 22 September 2019

UK travel giant Thomas Cook faces collapse - msnNOW

Thomas Cook's 178-year existence was hanging by a thread on Sunday after the iconic British travel firm struggled to find further private investment and is now relying on an unlikely government bailout.

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The operator said Friday that it needed £200 million ($250 million) -- in addition to the £900-million rescue deal secured last month -- or else face administration, which could leave thousands of holidaymakers stranded and require Britain's largest repatriation since World War II.

A source close to the negotiations told AFP on Saturday that the company had failed to find the £200 million from private investors and would collapse unless the government intervened.

But ministers are unlikely to step in due to worries about the pioneering operator's longer-term viability, the Times reported on Saturday, leaving it on the brink of collapse and stranding up to 150,000 British holidaymakers abroad.

"We will know by tomorrow (Sunday) if agreement is reached," the source told AFP.

Conservative Party minister Brandon Lewis told Sky News on Sunday that it would be "inappropriate" for him to comment on the negotiations, but said that he hoped "they come to a positive conclusion".

The firm's shareholders and creditors were to meet from 9 am (0800 GMT) on Sunday, with a meeting of the board of directors due to be held in the afternoon.

The Transport Salaried Staffs Association, which represents workers at the company, called on the government to rescue the firm.

"It is incumbent upon the government to act if required and save this iconic cornerstone of the British high street and the thousands of jobs that go with it," said TSSA General Secretary, Manuel Cortes.

"The company must be rescued no matter what."

Two years ago, the collapse of Monarch Airlines prompted the British government to take emergency action to return 110,000 stranded passengers, costing taxpayers some £60 million on hiring planes.

The government at the time described it as Britain's "biggest-ever peacetime repatriation".

- Jobs threatened -

Thousands of workers could also lose their jobs, with the company employing about 22,000 staff worldwide, including 9,000 in Britain.

Chinese peer Fosun, which was already the biggest shareholder in Thomas Cook, agreed last month to inject £450 million into the business.

In return, the Hong Kong-listed conglomerate acquired a 75 percent stake in Thomas Cook's tour operating division and 25 percent of its airline unit.

Thomas Cook in May revealed that first-half losses widened on a major write-down, caused in part by Brexit uncertainty that delayed summer holiday bookings. The group, which has around 600 stores across the UK, has also come under pressure from fierce online competition.

Cabinet maker Thomas Cook created the travel firm in 1841 to carry temperance supporters by train between British cities.

It soon began arranging foreign trips, being the first operator to take British travellers on escorted visits to Europe in 1855, to the United States in 1866 and on a round-the-world trips in 1872.

The company was also a pioneer in introducing "circular note" -- products that would later become traveller's cheques.

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https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/uk-travel-giant-thomas-cook-faces-collapse/ar-AAHFyco

2019-09-22 10:00:00Z
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Travel group Thomas Cook battles for survival with final creditor meeting - Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Bosses at Britain’s Thomas Cook (TCG.L) were meeting lenders and creditors on Sunday to decide whether the world’s oldest travel company could survive until Monday, or face a chaotic collapse that would be felt around the world.

FILE PHOTO: The Thomas Cook logo is seen in this illustration photo January 22, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration/File Photo

Running hotels and resorts, airlines and cruises, Thomas Cook has 600,000 customers on holiday, meaning governments and insurance companies could be forced to step in and bring them home if the company goes into administration.

The management team, led by Peter Fankhauser, was meeting banks and bondholders at a London law firm on Sunday morning before a board meeting in the early evening to determine whether it can continue.

The company, founded in 1841, has been fighting for its survival after its lenders threatened to pull the plug on a rescue deal that has been months in the making.

Hurt by high levels of debt, online competition and geopolitical uncertainty, Thomas Cook needs to find another 200 million pounds ($250 million) on top of a 900 million pound package it had already agreed, to see it through the winter months when it needs to pay hotels for their summer services.

A person familiar with the situation told Reuters the company was spending the weekend in talks with the government and a number of potential investors about bridging the funding gap. “We have not given up,” the person said on Saturday, declining to be named due to the sensitivity of the situation.

Were Thomas Cook to fail, it would spark the biggest peacetime repatriation effort in British history.

The government and the aviation regulator have drawn up a plan to step in and use other airlines to bring Britons home if needed. In Germany, where some 300,000 are abroad with the operator, it will fall to their insurance companies to help get them home.

The news has sparked alarm not just across the holiday resorts and poolside bars where customers are taking to social media for updates, but to the company’s suppliers and future customers who are losing faith in the firm.

That is draining the company of the liquidity it needs to keep operating and ramping up the pressure on one of Britain’s oldest and much-loved companies.

“Hi Annie, I understand your father might be unsettled by all the news surrounding Thomas Cook and our business recently but our flight operations continue to operate as normal,” the company said in response to one worried customer.

British foreign minister Dominic Raab sought to reassure holidaymakers that they would not end up stuck overseas.

“We .... hope that it (Thomas Cook) can continue but in any event, as you would expect, we’ve got the contingency planning in place to make sure that in any worst-case scenario we can support all those who might otherwise be stranded,” Raab told the BBC.

At the board meeting, the company will have to decide whether in the short term it has enough cash to pay its ongoing requirements, and whether it has a reasonable prospect of paying its liabilities in six to 12 months’ time, which is predicated on it securing a deal.

At the earlier meeting the lenders will have to decide whether they want to continue supporting a company that has 19 million customers a year in 16 countries.

It is battling a debt pile of 1.7 billion pounds and can be knocked off course by events such as a coup in Turkey, a heatwave in Europe and the aggressive summer pricing of low-cost airlines like Ryanair.

Reporting by Kate Holton; Additional reporting by William James and Thomas Escritt; Editing by Dale Hudson

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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-thomas-cook-grp-investment/travel-group-thomas-cook-battles-for-survival-with-final-creditor-meeting-idUSKBN1W70A9

2019-09-22 09:44:00Z
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UK travel firm Thomas Cook holds talks to avoid a collapse - Stuff.co.nz

Thomas Cook, one of the world's oldest and largest travel companies, is holding talks with shareholders in a last-ditch bid to avoid going bankrupt.

A collapse could leave around 150,000 travellers from Britain stranded, along with tens of thousands of travellers from other countries. The British government may have to lease planes to get its citizens home.

Thomas Cook needs NZ$398 million in extra funding to avoid a collapse.

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Thomas Cook needs NZ$398 million in extra funding to avoid a collapse.

Sunday's meeting, first reported by Sky News, is taking place at the London-based law firm Slaughter & May. Officials from Thomas Cook were not available for comment.

Thomas Cook confirmed on Friday it was seeking £200 million (NZ$398 million) in extra funding to avoid a collapse. It said it was in talks with stakeholders such as the Chinese shareholder Fosun.

READ MORE:
Woman nearly kicked off Thomas Cook flight over crop top 
Tour giant Thomas Cook to axe trips to SeaWorld 

Unions have urged the British government to intervene financially to save jobs if the company cannot raise the necessary funds.

 

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https://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/news/116001606/uk-travel-firm-thomas-cook-holds-talks-to-avoid-a-collapse

2019-09-22 09:31:00Z
52780389678619

A Long-Despised and Risky Economic Doctrine Is Now a Hot Idea - Bloomberg

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A Long-Despised and Risky Economic Doctrine Is Now a Hot Idea  Bloomberg

It's like a design competition. Hardly anyone thinks central banks can fix a stalling world economy with their current tools. So some of the biggest names in ...


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-22/a-long-despised-and-risky-economic-doctrine-is-now-a-hot-idea

2019-09-22 05:00:00Z
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Sabtu, 21 September 2019

Paranoia Written All Over S&P 500 in Struggle Back to a Record - Bloomberg

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Paranoia Written All Over S&P 500 in Struggle Back to a Record  Bloomberg

The relentless drive into defensive stocks is a logical way to cope for investors beset all year by signs a recession is at hand. It's also a tough way to set a *fresh* ...


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-21/paranoia-written-all-over-s-p-500-in-struggle-back-to-a-record

2019-09-21 11:00:00Z
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