A few years of airline deals had everyone guessing who would pair up next. Then the CEO best known for those deals waved them all off. United boss Scott Kirby says the era of big mergers is basically over. Asked about future tie-ups, he gave a blunt answer: "There's nothing."
Kirby Steps Back From Dealmaking
First, the plain version. Consolidation just means big firms merging into fewer, bigger ones. Why do investors care? Fewer airlines can mean less competition. That can lift ticket prices and profits. So every deal rumor gets a lot of attention.
Kirby is no bystander here. He once called himself one of the main builders of airline mergers in the country. So the cold take carries weight. He has seen plenty of these deals up close.
"United's not going to do a deal just to do a deal," he told reporters. He spoke at a yearly gathering of the world's airlines. It was held this year in Brazil.
His reasoning is plain. The deals are hard to pull off. And you should not do one that does not make sense.
We make sense of moves like this for investors every morning in Market Briefs. Signing up gets you a free investing masterclass.
The American Deal That Fell Apart
Earlier this year, Kirby looked at joining United with American Airlines. He used to work there. He even floated the idea to the Trump team.
American said no. As Kirby put it, a merger needs support from everyone. That means workers, flyers, owners, and the government. Without American's own bosses on board, there was no deal to be had. Some experts also doubted such a big deal would clear at all.
He has also brushed off the idea of buying United's new partner, JetBlue. A partnership lets airlines team up without a full merger. They share routes and flyers instead.
What To Watch
United is not the only big carrier stepping back. Delta said it does not see a merger in its future. It is leaning on partnerships instead. Delta would rather chase United over the Pacific than buy a rival. United is the second most profitable airline in the country.
Smaller deals still happen. Allegiant joined Sun Country this year. Alaska bought Hawaiian back in 2024. Big airlines rarely merge these days. Rules and politics get in the way. Each deal takes years to close, and many never close at all. Kirby knows that better than most. He says the easy deals are done. So United plans to grow on its own. Flyers may notice little change for now. The map of who flies where stays put. He would rather grow United from the inside. New planes and routes can do the job. A merger is not the only way to win. For investors, the focus shifts back to how these airlines compete on their own.
For the daily read on what these moves mean for your portfolio, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs. A free 45-minute investing course comes with it.
