Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jetblue goes hostile in takeover bid

Spirit refused deal, citing antitrust worries

- By David Koenig and Michelle Chapman

Jetblue launched a hostile takeover bid for Spirit Airlines on Monday and asked shareholde­rs of the low-cost carrier to reject a proposed acquisitio­n by Frontier Airlines.

Jetblue hopes that its move will push Spirit’s board to the negotiatin­g table after the board rejected an earlier offer.

Spirit said that it will “carefully review” Jetblue’s tender offer and plans to make a recommenda­tion to shareholde­rs within 10 business days. Spirit asked the shareholde­rs not to respond to Jetblue until the board finishes the review.

Jetblue pitched a new offer of

$30 per share in cash, or more than $3.2 billion, to Spirit stockholde­rs but said its April 5 offer of $33 per share is still available if Spirit enters negotiatio­ns.

Shares of Spirit, based in Miramar, Florida, jumped 13.5 percent but still closed well below either Jetblue offer, at $19.27.

Spirit’s board rejected Jetblue’s original $3.6 billion bid on May 2, saying antitrust regulators are unlikely to approve an offer 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 cash-and-stock offer was valued at $2.9 billion when announced in February, but Frontier’s shares have dropped 30 percent since, reducing the value of the deal.

Jetblue said it reduced the price of its offer because of Spirit’s unwillingn­ess to share financial informatio­n.

“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 offering a significan­t premium in cash, more certainty and more benefits for all Spirit investors. He said Jetblue is confident of winning regulatory approval, and called the Frontier bid high risk and low value.

Frontier did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

The bid from Frontier Group Holdings Inc. provides less cash but would let Spirit shareholde­rs keep 48.5 percent of the combined airline.

It would give Spirit shareholde­rs 1.9126 shares of Frontier plus $2.13 in cash for each Spirit share.

Helane Becker, an analyst with banking firm Cowen, said the implied value of a Frontier-spirit deal “is a fraction of the value of (Jetblue’s) offer” of $30 per share in cash.

Either combinatio­n involving Spirit would create the nation’s fifth-biggest airline behind American, Delta, United and Southwest.

A sale to Jetblue would remove Spirit’s planes and pilots from the ultra-low-cost niche of the U.S. airline industry. However, a Frontier acquisitio­n of Spirit could be closely scrutinize­d too. Several prominent congressio­nal Democrats have warned that a Frontier-spirit merger could reduce competitio­n and drive up fares.

Shares of Jetblue Airways Corp. fell 6 percent while shares of Frontier, based in Denver, closed up 6 percent.

 ?? Charles Krupa The Associated Press ?? A traveler wearing a protective mask, due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, walks through the nearly empty Jetblue terminal at Logan Airport in Boston in 2020.
Charles Krupa The Associated Press A traveler wearing a protective mask, due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, walks through the nearly empty Jetblue terminal at Logan Airport in Boston in 2020.

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