(Reuters) – Canada’s WestJet Airlines Ltd said on Monday it will be acquired by private equity firm Onex Corp in an all-cash deal for C$3.53 billion ($2.63 billion).
Including debt, the deal is valued at about C$5 billion.
As part of the deal, WestJet shareholders will receive C$31 for each share held, representing an about 67% premium to its closing price on Friday.
The investment will be led by Onex Partners, Onex’s private equity platform focused on larger investment opportunities and WestJet’s board has recommended that its shareholders vote in favor of the deal.
The private equity fund has a history of investing in aerospace, having previously held a major stake in Boeing supplier Spirit Aerosystems.
The deal is expected to close in the latter part of this year or early next year, the company said.
CIBC Capital Markets and B of A Merrill Lynch were the financial advisers to WestJet, while Barclays, Morgan Stanley and RBC Capital Markets advised Onex.
(Reporting by Debroop Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)
Low-cost Viva Air plans NYSE listing within two years
Budget carriers are disrupting transport across Latin America
Viva Air, the Latin American group of carriers owned by a founder of Ireland’s Ryanair Holdings Plc, has plans for a third airline in the region plus an initial public offering, to cash in on strong demand for discount air travel.
The company aims to sell shares in New York within two years, Viva’s biggest shareholder, Declan Ryan, said in an interview in Lima. The shares could also be listed on another exchange, such as Colombia’s, he said.
LONDON (Reuters) – The chief executive of British Airways owner IAG ruled out bidding for Thomas Cook’s airline unit on Friday, a day after rival Virgin Atlantic was reported to be interested in part of the business.
Lufthansa and private equity fund Indigo Partners are seen among the front-runners for Thomas Cook’s airlines after the firm put it up for sale in February, to raise cash after a string of profit warnings in 2018.
IAG had previously been linked with the business, but on Friday, Chief Executive Willie Walsh said that his firm had not made a bid.
“In relation to Thomas Cook… we’re not putting in any bid,” Walsh told reporters.
He added in an analyst call later in the day that the firm was not actively pursuing M&A at the moment but was in a strong position to do so if something attractive came up.
Virgin Atlantic has put in a preliminary offer for the tour operator’s UK long-haul business, Sky News reported on Thursday. Thomas Cook and Virgin Atlantic both declined to comment on the report.
Lufthansa is a bidder for Thomas Cook’s German airline Condor with an option to acquire the remaining airlines of the British travel group, Lufthansa’s CEO said on Tuesday.
Indigo Partners is also a likely suitor for Thomas Cook’s airline business, sources said last week, adding that the deadline for initial bids was on Tuesday earlier this week.
An unexpectedly warm summer in northern Europe last year deterred holiday makers from booking lucrative last minute getaways, resulting in two major profit warnings for the world’s oldest travel company.
Worries about the firm’s ability to pay its debts pushed the yield on its euro-denominated bonds that mature in 2022 to a record high last Friday, and Thomas Cook said later in the day that it was in talks with its lenders about bolstering its finances.
Thomas Cook’s half-year earnings release for the six months to March 31 is due next Thursday.
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Keith Weir)
LONDON (Reuters) – Thomas Cook has set a deadline of May 7 for expressions of interest in its airline business, with Indigo Partners and Lufthansa among the likely bidders, sources said.
The heavily-indebted British travel group put its profitable airline business up for sale in February after profit warnings in 2018 left it needing to raise cash.
Thomas Cook’s airlines business consists of Germany’s Condor, as well as British, Scandinavian and Spanish operations.
A sale of the business, in whole or in part, would enable the world’s oldest tour operator to invest more in its own hotels and improve its online sales.
A source familiar with the discussions said that Indigo and Germany’s Lufthansa appeared most interested in the business.
British Airways owner IAG should not be ruled out and easyJet has engaged in talks but is seen as less interested, the source added.
It is not clear whether Ireland’s Ryanair would bid.
Another source said that private equity groups KKR and Apollo might also look at taking over the whole of Thomas Cook.
The airlines business would provide access to valuable European slots linking Britain to Spain, Greece and Turkey.
Thomas Cook, Indigo, IAG and easyJet declined to comment, while Lufthansa and Ryanair were not immediately available.
Lufthansa executives have said repeatedly that the German airline wants to “play an active role” in consolidation.
Indigo, the private equity firm managed by Bill Franke, the veteran U.S. low-cost airline investor, has previously made investments in several airlines including Hungary’s Wizz.
Thomas
Cook has been revamping different parts of its business this year,
closing high street stores and reviewing its money division as it
focuses on holidays.
The company was hit badly in 2018 when a hot European summer deterred customers from booking holidays through the year.
One banking source said the airline would fetch less than 1 billion euros (£859 million). Thomas Cook has a current market value of just over £400 million.
Sources said that competition issues could influence which parts of the business different suitors go for.
Sky News has said China’s Fosun International, a Thomas Cook shareholder, was interested in its tour business.
(Reporting by Kate Holton and Clara Denina in London; additional reporting by Alistair Smout and Georgina Prodhan in London and Arno Schuetze in Frankfurt; Editing by Alexander Smith)
(Reuters)
– Iceland’s WOW air became the latest budget airline casualty on
Thursday, halting operations and cancelling all future flights after
efforts to raise more funds failed.
WOW,
which focussed on low-cost travel across the Atlantic, advised stranded
travellers to seek flights with other airlines. It flew a total of 3.5
million passengers last year.
“This
is probably the hardest thing I have ever done but the reality is that
we have run out of time and have unfortunately not been able to secure
the funding of the company,” WOW CEO and founder Skuli Mogensen wrote in
a letter to the company’s 1,000 employees.
“I will never be able to forgive myself for not taking action sooner,” he added.
WOW
had earlier postponed flights on Thursday as it entered what it had
hoped were the final stages of an equity raising with a group of
investors.
“My
flight from Boston has been cancelled. Having a hard time getting
through to anyone on the phone. Can you help me at all?” Twitter user
Marc Solari wrote.
WOW replied with an apology and offer of further assistance.
WOW
is the latest budget airline to collapse as the European airline sector
grapples with over-capacity and high fuel costs. Recent failures
include Britain’s Flybmi, Nordic budget airline Primera Air and Cypriot
counterpart Cobalt.
“RESCUE FARES”
Other
airlines including, Icelandair, Easyjet and Norwegian stepped in
offering discounted ‘rescue fares’ to stranded passengers, according to
the Icelandic Transport Authority
WOW has been pursuing different avenues to raise money over the past few months.
It
ended talks with rival Icelandair last Sunday while veteran low-cost
airline investor Bill Franke also had cancelled a proposed investment
through private equity fund Indigo Partners.
Icelandair shares traded up 13 percent percent at 1215 GMT after the failure of a competitor.
Founded
in 2011 by entrepreneur Mogensen, WOW used smaller single-aisle planes
to fly between Iceland and many destinations in the United States and
Europe.
Its
website had advertised flights from London to cities such as New York
and Boston for as little as 150 pounds, although the journey went via
the Icelandic capital Reykjavik.
Norwegian
Air has a little over half of the market share in the fast-growing,
low-cost, long-haul transatlantic market, while WOW controlled a quarter
in 2018.
There are fears of a knock-on effect on Iceland’s important tourism industry.
Around
30 percent of tourists visiting Iceland last year flew with WOW and the
collapse could trigger a 16 percent drop in tourists this year,
research from Icelandic bank Arion showed.
( By Stine Jacobsen and Tommy Lund; editing by Darren Schuettler/Keith Weir)
* Jet Airways says 28 planes grounded for non-payment of dues
* Lenders, Etihad yet to approve restructure (Adds graphic)
SINGAPORE,
March 8 (Reuters) – FLY Leasing Ltd has grounded three planes on lease
to India’s Jet Airways Ltd and will take them back and redeploy them
elsewhere if the airline cannot gain approvals for a restructuring plan
this month, the lessor’s CEO said.
Jet
Airways on Thursday said another three aircraft had been grounded due
to its failure to make payments, taking the total number to 28, but it
has not specified the lessors involved.
The
grounding of nearly one-quarter of the airline’s fleet has led to the
cancellation of hundreds of flights and complaints from customers on
social media.
Several
major global aircraft leasing companies, including AerCap Holdings NV
and BOC Aviation have exposure to the financially troubled airline,
which has defaulted on loans and has not paid pilots, leasing firms and
suppliers for months.
“We
have grounded our aircraft, we have control over our aircraft, but we
have not terminated the leases and we are waiting for the airline to
approve all its restructuring with the State Bank of India,” FLY Leasing
CEO Colm Barrington told analysts on a results call on Thursday.
“If
that goes through at the end of the month, obviously, we will stay with
Jet. If they can’t get that done, then we’ll take our aircraft back and
redeploy.”
The
airline had three relatively young Boeing Co 737-800s on lease to Jet
Airways, which accounted for around 3 percent of FLY Leasing’s revenue,
he said.
Jet
Airways has outlined a draft to sell a majority stake to a consortium
led by the State Bank of India at 1 rupee, under regulations that permit
banks to convert debt to equity in a defaulting firm.
The
stake sale will be followed by an equity raising, debt restructuring
and the sale and leaseback of jets to help plug a $1.2 billion funding
gap, but the plan needs approvals from several stakeholders, including
major shareholder Etihad Airways.
(Reporting by Jamie Freed in Singapore; Additional reporting by Chandini Monnappa in Bengaluru; Editing by Stephen Coates)
(Reuters) – Private equity firm Apollo Global Management LLC is working on an offer to acquire General Electric Co’s aircraft leasing operations, which are worth as much as $40 billion, people familiar with the matter said on Friday.
Apollo’s bid comes as GE’s new chief executive officer, Larry Culp, is battling to restore profits and slash debt after the industrial conglomerate lost $22.8 billion in the third quarter, mostly from its ailing power unit.
GE is already pressing on with divesting several assets, including spinning off its healthcare unit and shedding its stake in oilfield services company Baker Hughes. Apollo’s offer could put pressure on GE to also sell the aircraft unit, known as GE Capital Aviation Services (GECAS).
Apollo is looking at financing its bid partly through debt and equity provided by Athene Holding Ltd, the annuity provider for which it provides asset management services, the sources said. Apollo’s private equity funds, co-investment from Apollo’s investors, and debt financing from banks will also help fund the deal, the sources added.
In addition, Apollo is open to exploring a transaction for GE’s long-term-care insurance business, whose liabilities have emerged as a significant burden, according to the sources.
GE has not yet agreed to a deal with Apollo, the sources said. The company could decide to explore a deal with other buyers or not sell GECAS at all, the sources added, asking not to be identified because the matter is confidential.
Apollo and GE declined to comment. Bloomberg News first reported on Apollo’s offer.
GECAS has a fleet of more than 1,900 planes, which it provides to airlines under long-term leases. Consolidation in the sector has intensified in the last few years, as Asian competitors chip away at the market shares of GECAS and its rival AerCap Holdings NV.
GECAS is a unit of GE Capital, which GE has been trimming since the 2008 financial crisis. In 2015, it clinched a deal to sell most of GE Capital’s real estate assets to Blackstone Group LP and Wells Fargo & Co for $23 billion.
Apollo has done several deals with GE. In October, Apollo agreed to buy a portfolio of $1 billion in energy investments from GE Capital. In 2015, Mubadala GE Capital, a joint venture between Abu Dhabi state fund Mubadala and GE Capital, agreed to sell a $3.6 billion portfolio of corporate and real estate loans in the United States and Europe to Apollo.
(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) – Icelandic low-cost carrier WOW air, which is in talks with U.S. private equity fund Indigo Partners about a potential investment, said on Thursday it would reduce its fleet to 11 aircraft from twenty and cut 111 jobs.
Indigo is managed by Bill Franke, the veteran U.S. low-cost airline investor, and has also made investments in U.S.-based Frontier Airlines, Mexico’s Volaris, Chilean carrier JetSmart and Hungary’s Wizz (WIZZ.L).
“After a challenging year, WOW air is now restructuring and simplifying its operations to return to its roots as a profitable ultra-low cost airline while discussions with Indigo Partners progress,” WOW Air said in a statement.
It said it was in negotiations with its lessors to return some of its aircraft including all Airbus A330s. Four Airbus A321s are being sold in a transaction that will improve its liquidity by more than $10 million, it said.
WOW Air will have around 1,000 employees after the job cuts, it said.
Indigo and WOW Air have not disclosed any details about their talks, but WOW Air has said that CEO and primary shareholder, Skuli Mogensen will remain a principal investor in WOW after the deal.
Icelandair (ICEAIR.IC) last month scrapped its plan to buy the privately-held airline.
(Reporting by Teis Jensen; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
Icelandair has released the following statement regarding the mutual decision to cancel Icelandair’s takeover of Wow Air:
| Source: Icelandair Group hf.
The acquisition of Icelandair Group of Wow air, based on a purchase agreement signed on November 5th, has been cancelled. Both parties agree on this outcome.
Icelandair Group hf. issued a stock exchange release last Monday, November 26th, stating that the company estimated that it would be unlikely that all of the conditions in the share purchase agreement would be fulfilled by the shareholders’ meeting on November 30th. That situation remains unchanged. Therefore, it is unlikely that the Board of Directors of Icelandair Group can recommend to the shareholders that they agree to the purchase agreement. Furthermore, the Board does not intend to submit to the shareholders’ meeting a proposal to postpone decision-making on the purchase agreement.
Due to this this situation, both parties agree to abandon the aforementioned purchase agreement. Icelandair Group will hold its shareholders’ meeting on Friday, November 30, as previously announced. An authorisation proposal for the Board to increase the share capital of Icelandair Group is on the agenda of the shareholders’ meeting.
Bogi Nils Bogason, Interim President & CEO of Icelandair Group: “The planned acquisition of Icelandair Group of Wow air will not go through. The Board of Directors and management of both companies have worked on this project in earnest. This conclusion is certainly disappointing. We want to thank WOW air‘s management for a good cooperation in the project during recent weeks . All our best wishes go out to the owners and staff of the Wow air. “
Skúli Mogensen, CEO and Founder of Wow air: “It was clear at the outset that it was an ambitious task to complete all the conditions of the share purchase agreement in this short period. We thank the Icelandair Group’s management team for this challenging project, and also wish the management and staff of Icelandair Group all the best.”
Following the news of the cancelled deal, it has been reported that budget airline roup Indigo Partners has agreed to buy a stake in the struggling discount carrier.
Click the link below for the full Indigo Partners-Wow Air story!