The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Stelios: I won’t stump up for easyJet bailout

- By Ben Harrington and Neil Craven

THE billionair­e founder of easyJet has refused to invest any more money in the budget airline amid speculatio­n that the FTSE 250-listed company plans to tap investors for more cash.

There is speculatio­n that the firm – in which Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou’s family vehicle is the largest shareholde­r – will ask investors for new funds for the second time within 12 months to secure its financial position.

City sources said some investors may have already been sounded out about a potential share fundraisin­g. In January, analysts at Citigroup said the airline could need another £300 million of equity to keep its debt to earnings level at a sustainabl­e level.

Haji-Ioannou, who last week made millions by selling shares and reducing his family’s holding in the airline to 27.7 per cent, told The Mail on Sunday: ‘At the rate that the scoundrels [what he calls the management team] are destroying the equity of the company, it is inevitable that more equity will have to be raised from investors.

‘They lost £1.5billion in the year to September 2020 and my guess is that they will lose a similar sum this year. For as long as the scoundrels squander the company’s money on more Airbus planes, I am not going to invest any of my money with them.’

EasyJet, which is completing a £4.5 billion order of 107 Airbus planes, raised £420million last summer by placing new shares with investors after its fleet was grounded.

Early in the pandemic, easyJet borrowed £600million from the Government. The unsecured loan must be paid back next month. Last week, it raised €1.2billion (£1billion) by issuing a bond to be repaid in 2028.

A spokesman for easyJet said: ‘We will continue to review our liquidity position and to assess further funding opportunit­ies should the need arise.’

 ??  ?? FOUNDER: Sir Stelios will invest no more in the airline
FOUNDER: Sir Stelios will invest no more in the airline

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