Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Air Canada lands deal to buy Aeroplan

$450M agreement assumes $1.9B liability, raises questions about Aimia’s future

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

MONTREAL An Air Canada-led consortium has reached a $450-million deal to acquire the Aeroplan loyalty program from Aimia Inc., earning plaudits from analysts but leaving questions about Aimia’s future.

The group, which includes TD Bank, CIBC and Visa Canada Corp., has agreed to pay $450 million in cash and assume the approximat­ely $1.9-billion liability associated with Aeroplan miles customers have accumulate­d.

“We are pleased to see that an agreement in principle has been reached as Aeroplan members can continue to earn and redeem with confidence,” Air Canada chief executive Calin Rovinescu said in a statement on behalf of the consortium Tuesday.

The agreement comes weeks after Aimia rejected an earlier offer from the consortium as too low and outlined that it believed $450 million would be a fair price, saying that a number of shareholde­rs were upset with the low offer.

The price is up from an initial offer in July of $250 million in cash and the assumption of the reward point liability that was rejected by Aimia.

Aimia shares were up 9.4 per cent at $4.20 in afternoon trading after hitting a 52-week high of $4.60 earlier in the session. Air Canada shares jumped nearly eight per cent to $26.69.

Any deal between the consortium and Aimia, which had been seeking out new partners to offset the loss of Air Canada when a current agreement was set to end in 2020, would be the best outcome for all stakeholde­rs, said GMP Securities analyst Martin Landry.

“It would allow for a smooth transition to Air Canada’s new loyalty program launching in 2020, safeguardi­ng their miles and providing convenienc­e and value for millions of Canadians.”

National Bank Financial analyst Adam Shine, however, said he was “left wondering how Aimia could trumpet its Plan B strategy with such optimism and yet set a seemingly low Aeroplan value.”

The Aeroplan deal is expected to close this fall.

The agreement, which is supported by Aimia’s board and Mittleman Brothers, Aimia’s largest shareholde­r that had previously opposed the lower offer, is subject to shareholde­r approval and other closing conditions.

Mittleman Brothers, which holds a 17.6-per-cent stake in Aimia, defended its acceptance of the deal and suggested a price tag of $1 billion — which it demanded earlier this month — now seemed unfeasible.

“We believe that our acquiescen­ce in agreeing to sell Aeroplan for $450M in cash was the best available outcome for all Aimia stakeholde­rs,” the investment firm said in a statement Tuesday.

The bid would leave Aimia with more than $1 billion in cash to invest elsewhere, Mittleman Brothers said.

Christophe­r Mittleman, chief investment officer of the New Yorkbased company, bristled earlier this month at a $325-million offer from the consortium, calling it “coercive” and “blatantly inadequate” in an open letter to Aimia’s board.

Mittleman recommende­d on Aug. 6 that Aimia accept no less than $1 billion, “especially not with a gun held to its head by its key commercial partners.”

Aimia’s recent Aeroplan partnershi­p agreements with three Canadian airlines — Air Transat, Flair Airlines and Porter Airlines — are now up in the air.

“Those were perhaps part of the negotiatio­ns and trying to build the pressure on getting a transactio­n,” said Altacorp Capital analyst Chris Murray.

Aimia had also been in discussion­s with the Oneworld airline alliance, whose members include British Airways, American Airlines and Cathay Pacific.

Analysts predicted about 1,000 Aeroplan employees — roughly 60 per cent of Aimia’s workforce — would transfer to Air Canada if the deal goes ahead.

Aimia’s other assets include a 48-per-cent stake in Aeromexico’s loyalty program, PLM, and a 20-per-cent share of Air Asia’s loyalty program, Think Big.

“With the sale of Aeroplan, the focus for Aimia investors will shift to actual net proceeds received from the sale and the company’s subsequent capital redeployme­nt strategy,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Drew Mcreynolds wrote in a report.

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