WOW, which focused on low-cost travel across the Atlantic,
advised stranded travelers 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 canceled. 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 canceled a
proposed investment through private equity fund Indigo Partners.
Icelandair shares traded up 13 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.
(Reporting by Tommy Lund; editing by Darren Schuettler/Keith
Weir)
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