TUI Travel

TUI Travel PLC
Public
Traded as LSE: TT.
Industry Transport
Founded 2007
Defunct 2014
Headquarters Crawley, England, UK
Key people
Friedrich Joussen
(Chairman)
Sir Michael Hodgkinson
(Deputy Chairman)
Peter Long
(Chief Executive)
Products Passenger transport, travel agency, accommodation
Revenue £15,051 million (2013)[1]
£297 million (2013)[1]
£63 million (2013)[1]
Owner TUI AG (56.4%)[2]
Number of employees
54,000 (2012)[3]
Subsidiaries Thomson Airways
Thomson Holidays
Website www.tuitravelplc.com

TUI Travel PLC was a British leisure travel group headquartered in Crawley, West Sussex. The company was formed on 3 September 2007 by the merger of First Choice Holidays PLC and the Tourism Division of TUI AG, which owned 56.4%.[2] The company operated in 180 countries and claimed 30 million customers.[4]

The company was listed on the London Stock Exchange, and was a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. TUI Travel merged with its German parent in 2014 to form the TUI Group.

History

TUI AG

The company was founded in 1923 in Berlin, Germany as Preußische Bergwerks und Hütten-Aktiengesellschaft operating in the industrial sector.[5] In 1959 it listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange and in 1964 was renamed Preussag.[5] In 2000 it acquired Thomson Travel and in 2002 bought Hapag Lloyd, which itself owned the travel firm TUI (formerly Touristik Union International), and renamed itself TUI AG.[6] In June 2014 TUI AG and TUI Travel announced the two companies would be merged.[7]

First Choice

The company was founded in 1973 as Owners Abroad operating as a travel agent.[5] It first listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1982.[5] In 1987 it launched Air 2000 and in 1990 acquired Redwing.[5] It changed its name to First Choice in 1994.[8]

In July 2005, First Choice Holidays purchased the Europe Express group of companies consisting of multi-channel distribution companies including: go-today.com for direct to consumer vacation packages, E.E.I. Travel and Brian Moore International Tours (BMIT) with travel agent distribution, Travel Services Europe (TSE), the contracting division for hotels and travel services throughout Europe.[9]

Merger

In March 2007, the merger of the travel division of TUI AG with First Choice was announced.[10] The European Commission approved the merger on 4 June 2007, on the condition that the merged company sell Budget Travel in Ireland.[11] The merged company, TUI Travel PLC, began operations in September 2007.[12]

TUI and First Choice's in-house airlines, Thomsonfly and First Choice Airways, were brought together under the former's Air operator's certificate in May 2008, and the merged airline was rebranded as Thomson Airways in November 2008.[13]

In October 2011 it was announced that under a two-year rebranding programme, the store estate would be rebranded as "Thomson featuring First Choice" to create a single travel agency brand; the First Choice branding and uniform will be phased out, and the First Choice name will be used for all-inclusive package holidays sold by the combined network.[14]

The company confirmed in January 2013 that it had received a proposal from its parent to merge.[15] In May 2013, the chief executive of TUI AG ruled out a merger with TUI Travel.[16] In an about-face in June 2014 the two companies announced they had agreed terms on a merger.[17] The merger was completed and TUI Travel was de-listed from the London Stock Exchange on 17 December 2014.[18]

Operations

The Company is organised into three sectors:[19]

Airlines

In 2005 the names and liveries of the group airlines were changed to reflect the name of the group. The airlines were rebranded with the name best known in their local market or the name of the principal tour operator, Jet4you and Britannia Airways names were changed. Jet4you acquired the suffix "-fly" whereas Britannia Airways had a complete name change, to reflect the tour operator that it was flying for therefore Britannia Airways became Thomsonfly. Following the merger of First Choice Airways and Thomsonfly, the new combined airline became Thomson Airways. Both airlines had their aircraft repainted in the light blue TUI colours with a red TUI logo on the tail. However, Corsairfly has been renamed Corsair International and has a new livery.

Current airlines

Airline Country Image Description
Corsair International France France Corsair International flies to 15 destinations in French overseas territories around the Mediterranean, Thailand, North Africa, and North America. This is the only airline in the TUI alliance that does not wear the TUI livery.
Thomson Airways United Kingdom United Kingdom Thomson Airways is the largest TUI-owned airline and the largest charter airline in the world. It operates a fleet of 64 aircraft and flies from 26 British airports to 109 destinations worldwide. It was formed by the merger of Thomsonfly (formerly Britannia Airways) and First Choice Airways.
TUI Airlines Netherlands Netherlands Netherlands Since 2005, the airline has operated charter flights from Amsterdam Schiphol to destinations in Southern Europe, North Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America.
TUIfly Germany Germany TUIfly is a German leisure airline headquartered at Hannover Airport, and is the fourth largest airline in the country. It operates charter flights to Southern Europe, North Africa, the Canary Islands and the Middle East.
TUIfly Belgium Belgium Belgium TUI Airlines Belgium, formerly Jetairfly, is a Belgian airline with its administrative headquarters in Ostend. TUI fly has operated since late 2005 and has a network of 180 routes to more than 100 airports in the Mediterranean, Red Sea, Caribbean, Canary Islands, Cape Verde Islands, Africa and the United States.
TUIfly Nordic Sweden Sweden

Denmark Denmark

Norway Norway

Finland Finland

TUIfly Nordic flies from Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Norway. They fly holidaymakers travelling with the tour operators Fritidsresor, Finnmatkat and Star Tour.

Former airlines

Airline Country Image Description
Aladia Airlines Mexico Aladia was a joint-venture between the TUI Group and Mexican investors; launched in 2006.[20] It was the only North American and Mexican airline part of the TUI Group. It suspended operations in October 2008 [21] and has yet to resume its operations.
Britannia Airways United Kingdom Britannia Airways was the largest charter airline in the United Kingdom, rebranded as Thomsonfly in 2005. Its main bases were London Gatwick, London Luton, Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle and Glasgow.
Jet4you Morocco Jet4you operated services between Moroccan cities and destinations in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Spain and Italy. Operations have now been merged with Jetairfly.
Britannia Nordic Sweden Sweden

Denmark Denmark

Norway Norway

Finland Finland

Britannia Nordic flew from Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Norway. It was merged into TUIfly Nordic.
First Choice Airways United Kingdom First Choice Airways was a charter airline of European tour operator TUI Travel PLC, based in Crawley, England. It flew to more than 60 destinations worldwide from 14 UK and Irish airports. Following TUI UK merging with First Choice Holidays in September 2007 it became part of TUI Travel PLC. The new holiday company continued with both in-house airlines (Thomsonfly and First Choice Airways) through Winter 07 and Summer 08 however from 1 November 2008 it became Thomson Airways.
Hapag-Lloyd Express Germany Hapag-Lloyd Express (previously also marketed as HLX.com) was a no-frills, high-frequency, express airline based in Langenhagen, Germany. It operated services within Germany and to destinations in Europe. In January 2007 in a restructuring, it combined its operations with Hapag-Lloyd Flug to become TUIfly.
Hapag-Lloyd Flug Germany Hapag-Lloyd Flug (between 2005 and 2007 it was also marketed as Hapagfly) was an airline based in Langenhagen, Lower Saxony, Germany. Mergered with Hapag-Lloyd Express and became TUIfly
Metrojet Russia The airline formed in 1993 as a regional airline as Kolavia and rebranded to a charter airline with new name Metrojet. Was the only TUI Group operator in Eastern Europe and Asia till August 2014. In August 2014, the airline exited from TUI Group, because of negotiations between the airline and the group.[22]
Neos Italy Neos was established on 22 June 2001 and started operations on 8 March 2002. It was started as a joint venture between Alpitour parent firm Finanziaria di Partecipazioni (IFIL), which is controlled by the Agnelli Group and the German tour operator, TUI. TUI sold its shares in 2004.
Thomsonfly United Kingdom Thomsonfly was a British airline, previously known as Britannia and a business within TUI UK prior to September 2007. Following TUI UK merging with First Choice Holidays in September 2007 it became part of TUI Travel PLC. The new holiday company continued with both in-house airlines (Thomsonfly and First Choice Airways) through Winter 07 and Summer 08 however from 1 November 2008 it became Thomson Airways.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Annual Report 2013". TUI Travel PLC. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  2. 1 2 "Shareholder Information". TUI Travel PLC. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  3. "TUI Travel: At a glance". TUI Travel PLC. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  4. "TUI and First Choice plan to merge amid competition in European travel", The New York Times (19 March 2007)
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 TUI Travel History
  6. TUI AG Chairman Frenzel to Speak at WTM’s Captains of Industry Association of Event Organisers
  7. "Tui Travel agrees to merger with German majority stakeholder - International Travel News". Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  8. Bray, Roger (2001). Flight to the Sun: The Story of the Holiday Revolution. Cengage Learning. p. 235. ISBN 978-0826448293.
  9. "Europe Express & First Choice Holidays PLC Partnership". Businesswire. 8 July 2005. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  10. "First Choice to tie up with TUI". BBC News. 19 March 2007. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  11. "First Choice-TUI merger cleared". BBC News. 4 June 2007. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  12. Simon Lambert (28 September 2007). "Tui and First Choice to merge". This is Money. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  13. "FSX Thomson Airways Boeing 767-300ER". Flyaway Simulation. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  14. Branwell Johnson (1 November 2011). "Thomson and First Choice to merge on high street". Marketing Week. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  15. Nathalie Thomas (16 January 2013). "TUI Travel in merger talks with German parent company". The Telegraph. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  16. "TUI AG CEO says no plans for merger with TUI Travel". Reuters. 15 May 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
  17. "Tui Travel agrees to merger with German majority stakeholder". International Travel News. 2014-06-27. Retrieved 2014-06-29.
  18. "Tui signals growth as merger is completed". Travel weekly. 17 December 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  19. "Our business - TUI Travel PLC". TUI Travel PLC. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  20. "Airliners.net forum: ALADIA, New Mexican Start-up!". airliners.net. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  21. "Aladia". aladia.com. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  22. http://www.rbc.ru/rbcfreenews/20140819225959.shtml

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