Virgin Atlantic suitors narrow with clock ticking
Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd.’s lineup of potential backers has narrowed as Richard Branson’s airline races the clock to secure a bailout, people with knowledge of the situation said.
Chief executive Shai Weiss made followup presentations to four remaining interested parties over the weekend, according to the people, who asked not to be named discussing a private matter. Virgin Atlantic pitched its plans for surviving the coronavirus crisis to a dozen firms earlier this month.
The airline is seeking to pin down emergency funding in the next two to three weeks, with restructuring specialist Alvarez & Marsal continuing to work on a so- called pre- packaged administration should it fail to secure support, the people said.
The trans- Atlantic specialist’s survival plan is based on securing around 750 million pounds (US$925 million) to shore up liquidity, including 500 million pounds in private or state funding. In addition, the rescue package would include an injection from founder Branson, and guarantees for credit card receipts, the people said.
In an email, Virgin Atlantic said it’s “exploring all available options” to obtain external funding. Construction discussions continue with stakeholders including the U. K. government, and “meanwhile the airline remains in a stable position.”
Virgin may need to ask the U. K. government to underwrite any private money, one of the people said.
If no offers of investment are forthcoming, Britain could alternatively provide a loan or take a direct stake in the airline, invoking the Project Birch rescue plan for strategically important companies unable to tap a Bank of England- administered fund because of their poor credit ratings, the person said.
Either measure would require a softening of the government’s stance on Virgin Atlantic, after the Department of Transport pushed back against contributing to a bailout earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic.
Since then, billionaire Branson has begin selling shares of his Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. space venture to raise cash, while Virgin Atlantic has announced that it’s cutting 3,150 jobs and shutting its London Gatwick hub to survive.
Insolvency procedures remain a last resort, the people said, though the pre- pack model being explored by Alvarez & Marsal can allow businesses that are viable but overrun by debt to make a fresh start rather than be broken up.
Among the firms initially briefed by Weiss as part of an investor search led by Houlihan Lokey were Deutsche Bank AG, Apollo Global Management, Cerberus Capital Management, Centerbridge Partners and Greybull Capital.