San Diego Union-Tribune

SPIRIT SHAREHOLDE­RS: REJECT FRONTIER

ISS advises against Denver carrier’s bid, says JetBlue bid better

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A firm that advises investors on proxy voting said Tuesday that Spirit Airlines shareholde­rs should oppose Frontier Airlines’ bid to buy Spirit, saying that a competing offer by JetBlue is better.

Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services conceded that Spirit’s board might be correct in concluding that the Frontier offer has a better chance of winning approval from antitrust regulators. However, the firm said, both bids carry regulatory risks but only the JetBlue offer includes a $200 million breakup fee in case regulators reject it.

ISS said Spirit shareholde­rs should reject the Frontier offer to signal its board to negotiate further with JetBlue, possibly to get a bigger breakup fee.

Shareholde­rs of Miramar, Fla.-based Spirit are scheduled to vote June 10 on whether to approve Frontier’s stock-and-cash offer, which was valued at $25.83 per share or $2.8 billion when announced in February. The offer’s value has sunk 26 percent to $19.19 per share since then because of a drop in the value of Frontier shares, ISS said.

JetBlue made an all-cash offer of $33 per share, or $3.6 billion, in April, and when that was rebuffed, it launched a tender offer at $30 per share, or $3.2 billion.

While New York-based JetBlue wants to acquire 100 percent of Spirit, the Frontier offer would let Spirit shareholde­rs keep 48.5 percent of the new, combined airline.

The Spirit board’s view “that more patient shareholde­rs would reap greater benefits by staying invested in a combined Frontier/ Spirit could prove out over time,” ISS acknowledg­ed. But it said a sale to JetBlue would give Spirit shareholde­rs a significan­t premium while airline stocks are down and let those who are optimistic about the sector reinvest the premium.

Spirit climbed 2 percent, JetBlue declined less than 1 percent, and Frontier gained 2,9 percent.

 ?? MATT ROURKE AP FILE ?? A Spirit Airline aircraft approaches Philadelph­ia Internatio­nal Airport. Two airlines are bidding for the Florida company.
MATT ROURKE AP FILE A Spirit Airline aircraft approaches Philadelph­ia Internatio­nal Airport. Two airlines are bidding for the Florida company.

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