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						 Virgin 
						America soars in market debut 
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		[November 15, 2014] 
		By Amrutha Gayathri
 (Reuters) - Shares of Virgin America Inc, 
		a low-cost airline partly owned by Richard Branson, soared more than 30 
		percent in their market debut, underscoring the buoyant mood in an 
		industry that is emerging from a long spell of turbulence.
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			 U.S. airline stocks hit a 13-year high this week as they gained 
			momentum from lower oil prices and increased travel spending by 
			Americans in an improving economy. 
 The company's IPO is the first for a U.S. airline since May 2011, 
			when Spirit Airlines Inc went public.
 
 Shares of Virgin America closed $7 above their IPO price of $23 on 
			the Nasdaq on Friday. They touched a high of $31.18 earlier in the 
			session, valuing the company at about $1.35 billion.
 
 "Shares are probably trading a little higher than we expected, but 
			we did expect an opening day pop," Virgin America Chief Executive 
			David Cush told Reuters.
 
			
			 
			At the high, the stock was trading 8.08 times 2013 earnings, 
			compared with Southwest Airlines Co's multiple of 37.43 and JetBlue 
			Airways Corp's 24.43.
 "I think it's a buy-and-hold story," said Josef Schuster, founder of 
			IPO investment firm IPOX Schuster LLC.
 
 Virgin America is the U.S. offshoot of Branson's London-based Virgin 
			Group, which is involved in sectors including airlines, railroads, 
			telecommunications, media and hospitality.
 
 The offering of 13.3 million shares, priced at $23 each, raised 
			about $307 million, with the company retaining most of the proceeds.
 
 Branson controls 24.8 percent of the company, while hedge fund Cyrus 
			Capital Partners is the biggest shareholder with a 32.8 percent 
			stake.
 
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			The airline, popular among travelers as it offers Wi-Fi, comfortable 
			leather seats and mood lighting, has been named the best U.S. 
			domestic airline by Condé Nast Traveler Magazine for the past seven 
			years.
 Virgin America, which took to the skies in 2007 just before the 
			financial crisis, earned $10.2 million on revenue of $1.42 billion 
			in 2013, its first ever profitable year.
 
 The airline leases all 53 of its Airbus single-aisle planes, which 
			mostly fly long-haul within the United States and Mexico, with Los 
			Angeles and San Francisco serving as main hubs.
 
 Cush said the company expected to add 10 planes to its fleet over 
			the next two years.
 
 Barclays and Deutsche Bank were the lead underwriters.
 
 (Reporting by Amrutha Gayathri in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb 
			Chakrabarty)
 
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