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United, American Airlines Climb on News of Kirby Floating Merger with Trump

April 14 (Reuters) - United Airlines and American Airlines shares rose in premarket trading on Tuesday after United CEO ​Scott Kirby, sources said, pitched the potential for ‌a merger of the two carriers to U.S. President Donald Trump in February.

A merger of two of the biggest U.S. ​carriers could be the largest ever airline ​consolidation in more than a decade.

American shares ⁠were up about 4%, while United rose around ​2%.

Both stocks have slid in recent weeks as the ​U.S.-Israeli war with Iran sent jet fuel prices sharply higher, with American plunging 14.1% and United slumping 10.4% since the ​conflict began in late February.

Kirby raised the idea ​during a February 25 White House meeting focused on the ‌future ⁠of Washington's Dulles airport, sources told Reuters.

He argued a combined airline could better compete internationally, where foreign carriers control a majority of long-haul seat capacity ​to and from ​the U.S., ⁠despite most passengers being U.S. citizens.

Industry officials and antitrust experts said approval would ​face steep hurdles, citing concerns over ​competition, ⁠higher fares, job losses and significant route overlap in an already highly concentrated U.S. airline market dominated by ⁠four ​large carriers.

United and American declined ​to comment, and the White House did not respond to requests ​for comment.

Reporting by Rashika Singh; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair

Source: Reuters


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