JetBlue CEO 'optimistic' airline can acquire Spirit
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[June 11, 2022] By
Rajesh Kumar Singh and David Shepardson
CHICAGO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - JetBlue
Airways Corp Chief Executive Robin Hayes said Friday he is "optimistic"
he can reach a deal to acquire Spirit Airlines Inc.
"We're pleased that there now seems to be a genuine desire from the
Spirit board to engage with us," Hayes told Reuters late Friday in an
interview. "We're going to continue to engage with the Spirit board over
the next few weeks."
Florida-based ultra-low-cost carrier Spirit is the subject of a bidding
war between JetBlue and Frontier Group Holdings Inc. Spirit has
repeatedly rejected JetBlue's offer, saying it has a low likelihood of
winning approval from U.S. regulators.
Spirit postponed a shareholder vote on its merger with Frontier to June
30 from June 10. Hayes said he thinks the majority of Spirit
shareholders believe JetBlue's offer is superior and "that's why they
had to delay the vote."
JPMorgan said in an analyst report 'Thursday that a deal by JetBlue to
buy Spirit has become a "growing probability."
Both bidders view Spirit as an opportunity to expand their domestic
footprints at a time when the U.S. airline industry is dogged by
persistent labor and aircraft shortages. Either of the two deals would
create the fifth-largest U.S. airline.
JetBlue has sweetened its offer for Spirit by increasing its reverse
break-up fee by $150 million to $350 million, raising the overall value
of its proposed deal to $3.4 billion. The New York-based airline has
offered to pay a portion of the fee upfront after Spirit shareholders
approve the deal.
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JetBlue Airways aircraft are pictured at departure gates at John F.
Kennedy International Airport in New York June 15, 2013.
REUTERS/Fred Prouser/File Photo
Frontier has agreed to pay Spirit a break-up fee of $250 million but declined to
raise its bid of $21.10 a share in cash and stock at Friday's closing price in
response to JetBlue's revised offer.
Hayes said the revised offers illustrate "the benefit of the competitive process
that the (Spirit) board should have run in the first place. Things that have
happened in the last two weeks could have happened months ago."
JetBlue's "Northeast Alliance" (NEA) partnership with American Airlines is a
sticking point with Spirit.
The Justice Department sued JetBlue and American to unwind the partnership.
Spirit has asked JetBlue to drop the partnership if it wants a deal, but JetBlue
declined.
JPMorgan said JetBlue would be willing to trade away the NEA partnership for a
Spirit merger.
"Mergers are transformational by design," the note said.
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh and David Shepardson; Editing by Susan Fenton
and David Gregorio)
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