Apollo seeks to take majority stake in SAS's Chapter 11 rescue plan -
sources
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[May 03, 2023] By
Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen, Greg Roumeliotis and Marie Mannes
COPENHAGEN/NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. asset manager Apollo Global
Management Inc plans to apply for approval from Swedish and Danish
regulators to take a majority stake in SAS AB as part of the
Scandinavian airline's rescue plan, a source familiar with the matter
said.
The news of interest from the U.S. asset manager sent the embattled
carrier's shares up as much as 14% in Wednesday morning trading. At 1011
GMT, they were up 5.9%.
SAS has lost almost 60% of its value since it filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection last July, seeking to slash costs and debt after
wage talks with pilots collapsed.
A deal with the U.S. private equity giant, which has also invested in
U.S. and Mexican airlines, would be a test of European Union rules,
which prevent more than 50% of an airline being held outside the bloc of
27 members.
Given a large part of Apollo's capital originates from Europe-based
investors, the fund is hoping to get approval for a deal, according to
the source, who declined to be identified because the matter is
confidential.
No final decision has yet been made on a possible investment, according
to two sources familiar with the matter. The first source said a deal
could be done before the year-end.
Apollo and SAS declined to comment.
Apollo will mainly work with aviation regulators in Sweden and Denmark
to secure approval, the first source said.
The European Commission would also be involved, but the national
regulators would be responsible for giving the go-ahead for a change of
ownership.
The move comes as the airline looks for large investors and seeks to
raise equity as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan.
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View of SAS Airbus A321 and A320neo
aircraft at Kastrup Airport parked on the tarmac, after pilots of
Scandinavian Airlines went on strike, in Kastrup, Denmark July 4,
2022. TT News Agency/Johan Nilsson via REUTERS
It has also secured a $700 million debtor-in-possession (DIP) loan
from Apollo to fund it through process. The U.S. company could
become a major shareholder in SAS by converting that loan to equity
at the end of the process.
The airline has struggled to compete in Europe's fragmented aviation
sector, like other national carriers such as Italy's ITA Airways and
Portugal's TAP, which are to be bought by larger groups to revive
their balance sheets.
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
Any deal would likely need support from Sweden and Denmark, which
each own about 22% of SAS. The remainder is controlled by private
shareholders.
Denmark's finance ministry told Reuters it was looking for one or
more shareholders to take a majority stake in SAS. Any bailout would
require the airline to maintain Copenhagen as a key passenger hub,
it said.
Sweden has said it won't inject more cash in SAS.
The sources said SAS would maintain its Scandinavian identity,
playing down speculation it could get a new hub or be transformed
into a low-cost carrier under a new owner.
This wouldn't be Apollo's first foray into the airline industry.
In 2018, it invested in Sun Country Airlines in an effort to help
turn it around, helping it go public in 2021.
The company also became the largest shareholder in Mexican airline
Aeromexico in 2020 following Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings.
Those experiences show it can approach long-term investments
flexibly, the two sources said.
(Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Copenhagen, Greg
Roumeliotis in New York and Marie Mannes in Stockholm; Writing by
Josephine Mason; Editing by Louise Heavens, Bernadette Baum and Mark
Potter)
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