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PhilWright | 6 years ago

Why do these travel companies always go bust in a way that leaves people stranded?

Surely the management must have known a week or two ago that the company was about to go under. In that case, stop anyone flying out but still bring people back. By the time they actually cease trading there should be few people left abroad. Some managers in Thomas Cook must have known that people flying out were going to end up stranded and they just let them go.

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rlucas|6 years ago

The moment they stop accepting reservations for new travel outbound is the moment they are commercially dead.

Agreed, if you knew there was 0% hope (say, of flying anyone back a week hence) it would be unethical to keep it going. But if you were trying to keep things afloat and thought you could do, it would be unethical to do otherwise, since stopping new outbounds would 100% doom the firm and strand the overseas travelers.

Scoundreller|6 years ago

I guess the question is: how often have airlines/tour companies been at the brink like this and pulled through?

If the answer is “close to zero”, we need to rethink this privilege.

greglindahl|6 years ago

I'm sure you read the article, which mentions that there were negotiations up to the last minute to raise the last 200mm pounds on top of the 900mm pounds existing rescue package.

human20190310|6 years ago

In general I think companies have a duty to their shareholders to fight to stay in business until it's literally impossible to do so. As long as there are resources left, those would have to be allocated to preserving the business, rather than to smoothing the process for their customers.

PhilWright|6 years ago

Exactly, they should have stopped flying people out when they were within two weeks of closing. If they had secured the funding needed to continue then all well and good and then start flying people out again.

buboard|6 years ago

This didn't come out of the blue. Thomas Cook is known to have problems for years and an impending collapse has been rumoured since months ago. Why did all these traveleres choose them is a better question

bshimmin|6 years ago

Because people often book holidays six months or more in advance, and Thomas Cook's financial woes weren't especially big news back then.

differentView|6 years ago

Because vast majority of people aren't aware of the financial health of the companies they purchase from.

stordoff|6 years ago

Completely playing devil's advocate - continuing to operate whilst knowing there is a high risk of them going bust gives the CAA more time to put in contingency plans, rather than going bust _now_.

Scoundreller|6 years ago

And the CAA got a lot of experience with this with Monarch.

But I doubt they’re happy about that experience.

choeger|6 years ago

The moment they stop flying out, they collapse. In that case they leave people behind and sink the company actively. Not a situation any manager wants to end up in.