The Guardian (USA)

Alaska Airlines to buy Hawaiian Airlines in deal that may face regulator scrutiny

- Associated Press

Alaska Airlines said Sunday it agreed to buy Hawaiian Airlines in a $1.9bn deal, including debt, putting it on track for a potential clash with a Biden administra­tion that has shown wariness about higher fares in the industry.

The combined company would keep both airlines’ brands, rooted in the nation’s 49th and 50th states. Alaska will pay $18 in cash for each share of Hawaiian, whose stock closed Friday at $4.86 after losing just over half its value in the year so far.

The deal also includes $900m in Hawaiian Airlines debt, which the airlines said brings the acquisitio­n’s total value to $1.9bn. The combined airline would be based in Seattle, with Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci at its head. The companies forecast the acquisitio­n will add to profits within two years of the deal closing. The combined airline would participat­e in the OneWorld alliance, which includes American Airlines, British Airways and Cathay Pacific.

Alaska and Hawaiian are both smaller than the nation’s dominant carriers, but they said a combinatio­n would meld two complement­ary networks to offer more connectivi­ty to 138 destinatio­ns for passengers traveling through the continenta­l US and across the Pacific, including non-stop service to 29 internatio­nal destinatio­ns in the Americas, Asia, Australia and the South Pacific.

Hawaiian has a deep and long history within the islands, stretching back to its incorporat­ion in 1929 under the name Inter-Island Airways.

The companies said they would keep Honolulu as a key hub and that they’re “committed to maintainin­g and growing union-represente­d workforce”

in Hawaii. They also said the combinatio­n would triple the destinatio­ns that can be reached within one stop in North America for travelers from Hawaii.

“We have a longstandi­ng and deep respect for Hawaiian Airlines, for their role as a top employer in Hawai’i, and for how their brand and people carry the warm culture of aloha around the globe,” Minicucci said in a statement.

The deal has been approved by the boards of both companies, but it still needs an OK from the shareholde­rs of Hawaiian Holdings. It will also need the blessing of US regulators, which have resisted more airline consolidat­ion out of fear it could lead to higher fares.

Both Hawaiian and Alaska are leading airlines flying between Hawaii and the US mainland, which could raise concerns about lessened competitio­n.

The Biden administra­tion is already trying to block JetBlue’s proposed $3.8bn acquisitio­n of Sprit Airlines, which would subsume the nation’s biggest budget carrier. The justice department also won a lawsuit that killed a partnershi­p between JetBlue and American Airlines.

The average domestic airline fare out of Seattle during the spring was $409.93. That was up from $293.08 two years earlier, according to data from the US Department of Transporta­tion. The average domestic airline fare out of Honolulu during the spring was $367.94, up from $329.93 two years earlier.

The Alaska and Hawaii companies expect the deal to close in 12 to 18 months.

 ?? ?? A Hawaiian Airlines plane on the island of Maui, on 24 March 2005. Photograph: Lucy Pemoni/AP
A Hawaiian Airlines plane on the island of Maui, on 24 March 2005. Photograph: Lucy Pemoni/AP

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