The US justice department has filed an anti-trust case to block the merger of American Airlines and US Airways.
The $11bn (£7bn) deal, which would form the world's largest
airline, was backed by a federal judge in March and has been approved by
the European Union.
The complaint says customers would see a price rise as the merger would "substantially lessen competition" in the domestic market.
US Airways boss Doug Parker said the company would fight the injunction.
"We are extremely disappointed in this action and believe the
DOJ [Department of Justice] is wrong in its assessment," Mr Parker said
in a letter to employees.
The District of Columbia and six US states and have joined
the legal action: Texas, where American Airlines is headquartered,
Arizona, where US Airways is based, Florida, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and
Virginia.
'Higher air fares'
American Airlines and US Airways said that in light of the
justice department's action they no longer expected the merger to close
by the end of 2013, but that they remained "hopeful" litigation would be
over by year's end.
Shares in both companies fell, along with the
stock prices of other airlines, as news of the anti-trust case hit the
markets on Tuesday.
"By challenging this merger, the Department of Justice is
saying that the American people deserve better," US Attorney General
Eric Holder said in a statement.
"This transaction would result in consumers paying the price - in higher air fares, higher fees and fewer choices."
The lawsuit also cites direct competition between the airlines on nonstop routes worth about $2bn in annual revenues.
In one example, the complaint says the newly merged company
would take up 69% percent of flights out of Washington's Reagan National
Airport and 63% of nonstop routes out of the airport.
The airlines had previously conceded take-off and landing slots at airports in Philadelphia and London in order to win EU approval last week.
When the deal was announced in February, US Senate Commerce
Committee chairman Jay Rockefeller also expressed concern that consumers
would lose.
American Airlines has been in bankruptcy protection since November 2011, but US Airways has been profitable in recent years.
'Stake in the heart'
The two combined airlines would have 6,700 daily flights and annual revenue of roughly $40bn.
The justice department complaint argues the
two companies do not need to merge to continue to be competitive, and
that American Airlines is likely to exit bankruptcy as a "vigorous
competitor".
The department also cited American Airlines' purchase two
years ago of 460 new planes, said to be the largest such order in
industry history.
If the merger continues, there will be only three major US
airlines, which the justice department alleges "increasingly prefer
tacit coordination over full-throated competition".
Some industry analysts suggest that American Airlines and US
Airways' ability to compete without a merger is not as strong as the
department argues.
"I'm not sure if long term either of these airlines can be a
viable competitor by itself," Ray Neidl, an airline analyst at Nexa
Capital, told the BBC.
"It probably will cause prices to go down in the short term
as they compete, but I think long term US Airways and American are going
to have a hard time competing."
But one opponent of the two firms' consolidation, Charlie
Leocha, director of the Consumer Travel Alliance, told Reuters news
agency: "This is a stake in the heart of the merger. I don't see this
moving forward."
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