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Easyjet bolsters cash by raising Us$520mil in share sale

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LONDON: Easyjet Plc raised about £419mil (Us$520mil) in a share sale, padding its coffers for the gearing up of flights as the European aviation sector emerges from the pandemic lockdown.

The stock offering, equal to almost 15% of its existing share base, was placed at the price of 703 pence a share, representi­ng a 5% discount to the closing price on June 24, the Luton, London-based company said Thursday in a filing.

The shares fell 4.6% at 8:11 am in London, taking the value down by half since the start of the year. After the sale and an up-to £350 mil sale-and-leaseback transactio­n for its aircraft, Easyjet said it will have more than £3bil of cash, which it has said would strengthen its balance sheet and increase liquidity.

Britain’s biggest discount airline was among the first European carriers to begin building up services again, and it said on Wednesday that its cash burn was slightly less-than-expected because more customers are opting to take vouchers instead of asking for refunds.

Easyjet is restarting with mainly internal flights in the UK and France, after hunkering down for months due to flight restrictio­ns during the region’s coronaviru­s lockdown.

“While there is an operationa­l cost to the flights, and in our view many flights will initially fail to reach breakeven, the positive signal of ‘flying again’ combined with the current developmen­ts across Europe in reducing the severity of social distancing measures and lockdowns should support bookings,” Daniel Roeska, an analyst at Bernstein wrote in a note to clients.

“As long as bookings start increasing, the cash flow for the company may well be positive during the startup,” he said, cautioning that profitabil­ity may only return in the second half of 2021.

Its bid to counter the impact of the virus has been further complicate­d by feuding with Easyjet’s founder and largest shareholde­r, Stelios Haji-ioannou, who has used the crisis to press a long-held demand for the airline to cancel a large aircraft order with Airbus SE.

Last month, Easyjet fended off an effort by Haji-ioannou to oust top management.

About one-third of the new placement will be subject to another shareholde­r vote, Easyjet said. It plans to hold the meeting around July 14.

Haji-ioannou couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment on the share sale. He had previously called on the company to raise £600mil in equity through a rights issue to existing shareholde­rs, although he said that he would only consider participat­ing if the jet order was canceled.

With Covid-19 infection levels on the decline in most of Europe, government­s have been easing travel restrictio­ns.

Holiday spots including Greece, Spain and Portugal are seeking to win back passengers.

Airlines are likewise trying to salvage the tail end of the summer season when tens of millions of people generally take their vacation.

The UK may also relax its controvers­ial quarantine requiremen­ts for incoming passengers as early as next week, with the adoption of so-called air bridges.

Easyjet said revenue increased a 1.6% in the first half, while reporting a pretax loss of 353 million pounds, including a 160 million pound charge for fuel hedges.

The carrier said it wasn’t possible to provide guidance for the remainder of the financial year, due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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