The Mercury News

Hertz may sell controllin­g interest in effort to exit bankruptcy.

Company may sell controllin­g interest to two firms for $4.2B

- By Michelle Chapman

In a deal to jettison itself from under bankruptcy protection, Hertz said Tuesday that it may sell a controllin­g stake in the company to two investment firms for $4.2 billion.

Knighthead Capital Management and Certares Opportunit­ies will have the chance to buy the entire reorganize­d car rental company, but no less than a majority of its shares, Hertz Global Holdings Inc. said.

Hertz was among the first major corporatio­ns to be felled by the pandemic last year as infections surged and shut down travel on a global scale for both companies and vacationer­s.

Hertz filed for bankruptcy protection in May 2020. Sales growth went into negative territory almost immediatel­y, but the 100-year-old company was already experienci­ng some turmoil. When it entered bankruptcy protection, Hertz named its fourth chief executive in six years.

However, with the rollout of a suite of vaccines for the coronaviru­s, pent up wanderlust is expected to explode. Investors are pouring money into almost any company that caters to travelers. Share of major airlines are up between 20% and 40% this year. Cruise, lines, hotels and resorts are getting similar interest.

In this atmosphere, Certares and Knighthead recently formed the CK Opportunit­ies Fund, which concentrat­es on investment­s in travel and leisure.

Hertz, based in Estero, Florida, said the proposed investment, combined with a new $1 billion first-lien financing, a new $1.5 billion revolving credit facility, and a new asset-backed securitiza­tion facility to finance its U.S. vehicle fleet, will provide the funding needed for the company to complete its restructur­ing and emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in early to mid summer.

The proposed plan still needs court approval. A hearing is set for April 16.

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