For the salt-to-software Tata Group, consolidation of its airline businesses will mean cost efficiencies, for instance, by removing overlapping routes and perhaps losing the AirAsia brand along the way. Meanwhile, a substantial stake in Air India will be the jewel in Singapore Airlines’ crown. Its home base in Singapore is well-suited as a router of international passenger flows between India and the U.S. west coast.
Vistara, which has already started some European routes, plans direct flights to the U.S. as well, effectively giving Singapore Airlines a foothold in the lucrative West-bound market from India, long dominated by Emirates Airline, Etihad and Qatar Airways. If the New Zealand-born Wilson, a Singapore Airlines veteran, can pull off an Air India-Vistara integration, Goh can use the template to roll out his multi-hub strategy in other markets. Hopefully, those efforts won’t drag on for two decades. Or else they may have to be concluded by the successor to the 58-year-old CEO.