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The history of the airline industry has been littered with mergers that didn't work out as well as planned. American Airlines parent AMR Corp. bought TWA during a recession in 2001. Within a few years, American had dropped TWA's St. Louis hub and furloughed most of the TWA workers. The 2005 deal to combine US Airways and America West is still plagued by animosity between the two labor groups. Continental and United talked about a merger in 2008, but Continental -- the smaller but more financially secure of the two
-- walked away from the table. Talks resumed this year after Delta's acquisition of Northwest seemed to go smoothly, creating a more powerful competitor. UAL and Continental stock will continue to trade until the deal closes, at which time Continental shareholders will get 1.05 shares in the new United for each Continental share they owned. Current UAL shareholders will own 55 percent of the combined company.
[Associated
Press;
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