Toronto Star

BUYING AEROPLAN

Move will see airline pay $450M in cash, assume $1.9B of Aeroplan miles liability

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Air Canada has signed an agreement to purchase the loyalty program from Aimia,

MONTREAL— Air Canada has signed a definitive agreement to buy the Aeroplan loyalty program from Aimia Inc. for $450 million in cash.

Under the deal, Air Canada will also assume $1.9 billion of Aeroplan miles liability. The definitive agreement follows an announceme­nt in August of a tentative sale.

Air Canada said it has also signed agreements with TD Bank, CIBC and Visa that will see them stay on with the Aeroplan loyalty program.

Under its deal, TD will pay Air Canada $622 million plus an additional $308 million that will be applied to future purchases of loyalty points.

CIBC will pay $200 million to Air Canada, plus an additional $92 million that will be applied to future monthly payments for Aeroplan miles. Visa will also be making a payment to Air Canada.

The Montreal-based airline said it is still in talks with American Express, which also issues Aeroplan co-branded cards, to secure its continued participa- tion. Aimia shareholde­rs must greenlight the Aeroplan purchase before it goes through, on top of closing conditions and regulatory approvals. They’re slated to gather for a special meeting on Jan. 8 in Montreal, the loyalty analytics company said.

The deal is expected to close in January, Air Canada said.

“The proceeds realized from this transactio­n will put Aimia in the enviable position of having significan­t cash and invest- ments on hand and no financial indebtedne­ss,” Aimia chair Robert Brown said.

The Aeroplan agreement will leave the company with more than $1 billion in cash to invest elsewhere, according to Mittleman Brothers, Aimia’s largest stakeholde­r at 17.6 per cent.

Aimia management said in August it has considered further asset sales and a windup of the company.

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

Air Canada chief executive Calin Rovinescu confirmed the company’s new loyalty program will launch in 2020, “safeguardi­ng all Aeroplan Miles” for its roughly five million members.

TD chief executive Bharat Masrani said the bank is pleased to become “the primary credit card issuer” for Air Canada.

Aimia’s shares were up 6 cents at $3.81in trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Monday afternoon.

 ?? MARK BLINCH THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Analysts have predicted about 1,000 Aeroplan employees — roughly 60 per cent of Aimia’s work force — will transfer to Air Canada if the deal goes ahead.
MARK BLINCH THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Analysts have predicted about 1,000 Aeroplan employees — roughly 60 per cent of Aimia’s work force — will transfer to Air Canada if the deal goes ahead.

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