Virgin Australia B737 Max 8

VA785 BNE-CNS on Sat 29 Jul will also be operated by the MAX so it can take over Tokyo from the 30th.
Looks like it'll either be VA799 on 21 July or VA771/775 on 22 July itself for the MAX taking over HND?
 
Looks like it'll either be VA799 on 21 July or VA771/775 on 22 July itself for the MAX taking over HND?
According to FlightRadar24, on 21 July VH-8IA is scheduled to do two BNE-MEL returns and VA77 is due to be operated by VH-VBZ.
 
Does anyone know when the second 737-8 is due to arrive?
The schedules currently list 11 September for 737-8 service on Brisbane - Cairns & Brisbane - Perth, but again subject to change.

The second, VH-8IB, has a line number of 8724. If it’s any indication, the highest line number for a MAX delivery so far is LN 8703 to Ryanair. I can’t imagine it will be too far off the production line.
 
by the way, what's the reason behind "Virgin Australia Airlines Pty Ltd" and "Virgin Australia International Airlines Pty Ltd" being seperate companies? I don't believe this is the case for Qantas, AirNZ, etc. for international operations (except Jetconnect I suppose)
 
by the way, what's the reason behind "Virgin Australia Airlines Pty Ltd" and "Virgin Australia International Airlines Pty Ltd" being seperate companies? I don't believe this is the case for Qantas, AirNZ, etc. for international operations (except Jetconnect I suppose)
Due to ownership regulations for Australian carriers flying internationally. As the parent company VAH is a foreign owned company, they need to establish a 'separate' subsidiary for international rights, hence 'VAi', and the international subsidiary has to be 51% locally owned for international traffic rights.

Thus why VAi is only 49% foreign owned by Bain, and the 51% is owned by "Australian institutional investors", or in other words the VAi subsidiary is just a collection of 'filing cabinets' for paperwork purposes in the VAH offices in BNE.

VA1.0 and AN also used this method (51% owned by Australian 'shell companies'/investors) to retain their international rights during the parent company's time of foreign ownership.
 
Due to ownership regulations for Australian carriers flying internationally. As the parent company VAH is a foreign owned company, they need to establish a 'separate' subsidiary for international rights, hence 'VAi', and the international subsidiary has to be 51% locally owned for international traffic rights.

Thus why VAi is only 49% foreign owned by Bain, and the 51% is owned by "Australian institutional investors", or in other words the VAi subsidiary is just a collection of 'filing cabinets' for paperwork purposes in the VAH offices in BNE.

VA1.0 and AN also used this method (51% owned by Australian 'shell companies'/investors) to retain their international rights during the parent company's time of foreign ownership.
Learn something new every day.

Also MUFG Bank is Japan's largest bank 🧐
 
Turn business expenses into Business Class! Process $10,000 through pay.com.au to score 20,000 bonus PayRewards Points and join 30k+ savvy business owners enjoying these benefits:

- Pay suppliers who don’t take Amex
- Max out credit card rewards—even on government payments
- Earn & Transfer PayRewards Points to 8+ top airline & hotel partners

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

MAX8 -8IA has been operating on the HND route seemingly flawlessly for a week now, any insight or data on recent load factors and overall performance compared to the 73G’s?
 
Due to ownership regulations for Australian carriers flying internationally. As the parent company VAH is a foreign owned company, they need to establish a 'separate' subsidiary for international rights, hence 'VAi', and the international subsidiary has to be 51% locally owned for international traffic rights.

Thus why VAi is only 49% foreign owned by Bain, and the 51% is owned by "Australian institutional investors", or in other words the VAi subsidiary is just a collection of 'filing cabinets' for paperwork purposes in the VAH offices in BNE.

VA1.0 and AN also used this method (51% owned by Australian 'shell companies'/investors) to retain their international rights during the parent company's time of foreign ownership.

The difference being regulation applies to Australian airlines flying internationally, but also specifically Qantas Airways Limited (the company) - so QF doesn't have the luxury of doing what VA does with a shonky international subsidiary. The parent company of QF must maintain majority Australian owned
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.
Back
Top