The Oklahoman

JetBlue goes hostile in Spirit takeover bid

- Michelle Chapman and David Koenig

JetBlue is going hostile in its bid for Spirit Airlines and asking shareholde­rs of the low-cost carrier to reject a proposed acquisitio­n by Frontier Airlines.

JetBlue, in going straight to shareholde­rs with its offer Monday, wants to push Spirit’s board to the negotiatin­g table.

Shares of Spirit, based in Miramar, Florida, jumped 12% in midday trading.

JetBlue pitched a new offer of $30 per share in cash, or more than $3.2 billion, to Spirit stockholde­rs but said its April 5 offer of $33 per share is still available if Spirit enters negotiatio­ns.

Spirit’s board rejected JetBlue’s original $3.6 billion bid on May 2, saying antitrust regulators are unlikely to approve an offer from the New York City airline largely because of its alliance with American Airlines in the Northeast. The Justice Department is suing to block that deal.

Shareholde­rs of Spirit Airlines Inc. are scheduled to vote June 10 on the Frontier bid, which is favored unanimousl­y by the Spirit board. The cashand-stock offer was valued at $2.9 billion when announced in February, but Frontier’s shares have dropped 30% since, reducing the value of the deal.

JetBlue said its new offer is lower because of Spirit’s unwillingn­ess to share financial informatio­n that JetBlue requested.

“The Spirit Board failed to provide us the necessary diligence informatio­n it had provided Frontier and then summarily rejected our proposal, which addressed its regulatory concerns, without asking us even a single question about it,” JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes wrote in a letter. “The Spirit Board based its rejection on unsupporta­ble claims that are easily refuted.”

Hayes said JetBlue is offering a significant premium in cash, more certainty and more benefits for all Spirit investors. He said JetBlue is confident of winning regulatory approval, and called the Frontier bid high risk and low value.

Neither Spirit nor Frontier responded immediatel­y to requests for comment.

The bid from Frontier Group Holdings Inc. provides less cash but would let Spirit shareholde­rs keep 48.5% of the combined airline. It would give Spirit shareholde­rs 1.9126 shares of Frontier plus $2.13 in cash for each Spirit share.

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