Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

5 airlines agree to U.S. loan deals

American, others in line for billions more to ride out virus

- DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS — American Airlines and four smaller carriers have reached agreement with the government for billions more in federal loans, a sign of the industry’s fight to survive a downturn in air travel caused by the virus pandemic.

The Treasury Department said Thursday that it had signed letters of intent for new loans to American, Spirit Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines and SkyWest Airlines.

All the leading U.S. airlines had previously accepted a combinatio­n of grants and loans to help cover payroll costs through Sept. 30. These five are the first carriers to tentativel­y accept loans from a separate $25 billion kitty that Congress set aside under a $2.2 trillion measure to help companies hurt by the pandemic.

American Airlines said it signed a term sheet with Treasury for a $4.75 billion loan, which would be in addition to $5.8 billion that Treasury has already agreed to extend to American.

“We have to complete some legal work to reach a definitive credit agreement, but we expect to finalize that loan during the third quarter,” American Chief Executive Officer Doug Parker and President Robert Isom said in a note to employees. They said the additional loan would give American liquidity of about $15 billion.

American is generally considered the financiall­y weakest of the largest U.S. airlines, having entered the pandemic with the largest amount of debt. Isom said in May that the airline was considerin­g using its AAdvantage frequent-flyer program as collateral for a federal loan.

Details about terms of the new loans for American and

others were not immediatel­y clear. The Treasury Department said it would post documentat­ion within 72 hours of the agreements becoming final — which, judging from American’s comments, could be weeks from now.

A spokeswoma­n for Sky West, which operates regional flights for the major airlines, said the company is still “evaluating our level of participat­ion with the Treasury.” The other three airlines signing letters of intent did not immediatel­y answer requests for comment.

Spirit and Frontier are low-fare carriers that appeal primarily to leisure travelers. Hawaiian depends heavily on vacationer­s visiting the islands

from the U.S. mainland and Asia — they have been subject to a 14-day quarantine upon arrival.

Airlines received special treatment from Congress and the White House during drafting of the virus-aid measure, which was approved in March. It provided up to $50 billion in grants, loans and guarantees to passenger airlines, plus $8 billion for cargo carriers. The measure gave the Treasury Department power to seek compensati­on for taxpayers, including in the form of partial ownership stakes.

The airlines are expected to slash thousands of jobs in October, when the federal payroll help runs out. Many are encouragin­g employees to quit or retire.

American Airlines, which began the year with about

130,000 employees, still expects to have 20,000 too many for the number of flights it expects to fly this fall, its leaders said this week. Delta Air Lines warned 2,500 pilots last week about potential furloughs.

Six leading airline unions have asked Congress to give the companies another $25 billion to prevent layoffs through next March.

Analysts believed interest in the second batch of federal loans would be lower because of the terms — including giving the government a potential ownership stake — and the availabili­ty of money from private sources. Major carriers including American, United, Delta and Southwest have raised billions in available cash on the private credit market.

Treasury Secretary Steven

Mnuchin said his department was still talking with other airlines about loans and hopes to reach agreements as soon as possible. Some, including United Airlines, have said they would apply for loans but might not use them.

Air travel within the United States fell about 95% from March 1 through mid-April, as the government restricted travel to slow the spread of the virus and travelers feared contractin­g it. Travel has recovered slowly since then, but the number of airline passengers is still about 75% lower than a year ago.

Investors gave a muted reaction to Treasury’s announceme­nt. Shares of American Airlines and its three closest competitor­s — Delta, United and Southwest — ranged from down 1% to up 1% in midday trading.

 ?? (AP/Nam Y. Huh) ?? An American Airlines ticket counter sits nearly empty June 16 at O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago. The Treasury Department said Thursday that it had finalized terms for new loans to American and four other airlines.
(AP/Nam Y. Huh) An American Airlines ticket counter sits nearly empty June 16 at O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago. The Treasury Department said Thursday that it had finalized terms for new loans to American and four other airlines.

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