Toronto Star

Aimia, Air Canada complete Aeroplan sale

Airline promises smooth transition to new loyalty plan

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Air Canada has completed its purchase of the Aeroplan loyalty program from Aimia Inc., assuring customers their miles will be honoured on a “one-to-one basis” when the airline’s new rewards program launches in 2020.

“Air Canada is creating an industryle­ading loyalty program that aims to provide unmatched flexibilit­y, choice and convenienc­e for customers when it debuts in 2020,” chief executive Calin Rovinescu said in a statement Thursday.

The deal marks a reunion for Aeroplan and Air Canada, which spun off the points program in 2005 under a restructur­ing.

It will also mean better access to customer data for Air Canada — Aeroplan has about five million members — and positions the Montreal-based airline to compete against the PC Optimum loyalty program run by Loblaw Companies Ltd., which boasts about 16 million members.

Aimia used most of its gross proceeds from the sale, which totalled roughly $497 million after adjustment­s related to working capital, to repay debt.

At closing, Aimia used about $308 million to repay and terminate its credit facility and redeem all of its outstandin­g senior secured notes. A further $100 million has been deposited into a restricted, interestbe­aring account jointly con- trolled by Aimia and Air Canada under the terms of the deal.

Aimia said about half of its 1,500 employees will move to Air Canada as a result of the transactio­n.

“Aimia is in the enviable position of having unrestrict­ed cash of over half a billion dollars alongside its meaningful operating business and investment­s after accounting for the impact of the sale and the repayment of all of our financial indebtedne­ss,” Aimia chair Robert Brown said in a release.

The loyalty analytics company’s other assets include the Air Miles Middle East loyalty program, a 48 per cent stake in Aeromexico’s loyalty program, PLM, and a 20 per cent share of AirAsia’s loyalty program, Think Big.

In addition to the cash payment, Air Canada has assumed about $1.9 billion in liabilitie­s to points holders, partially backed by two banks that offer Aeroplan credit cards.

Toronto-Dominion Bank and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce paid Air Canada about $822 million, on top of an undisclose­d payment from Visa Canada Corp. TD and CIBC also made prepayment­s of $400 million in total to the Aeroplan — now Air Canada’s subsidiary — to be applied to future monthly payments “in respect of Aeroplan Miles,” Air Canada said. The banks and Visa have agreed to stay with the loyalty program until at least 2030.

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