Morning Sun

Spirit rejects Jetblue takeover bid, sticks with Frontier offer

- By Mary Schlangens­tein

Spirit board unanimousl­y rejected Jetblue’s unsolicite­d $3.6 billion takeover bid over concerns it wouldn’t be consummate­d, saying it would instead stick with a lower offer from Frontier.

“The Jetblue proposal involves an unacceptab­le level of closing risk,” Spirit Chairman Mac Gardner said in a letter to Jetblue released Monday. “Spirit continues to believe in the strategic rationale of the proposed merger with Frontier and is confident that it represents the best opportunit­y to maximize longterm shareholde­r value.”

The decision keeps Spirit and Frontier on a path to create the nation’s largest deep discounter -- carriers that charge fees for everything beyond a low, barebones ticket -- at a time of rebounding domestic leisure travel. Spirit had accepted Frontier’s $2.9 billion cash-and-stock offer earlier this year before Jetblue stepped in last month with a bid that raised questions over possible antitrust pushback.

The move stymies Jetblue’s best shot at nearterm growth.

While the carrier didn’t increase its $33-a-share cash offer, it revealed a sweetened bid on Monday with pledges to divest assets and include a $200 million reverse breakup fee. The plan aims to reduce risk of regulatory resistance while protecting an existing alliance in the northeast U.S. with American Airlines.

Spirit shares tumbled 10% at 11:30 a.m. in New York, the biggest intraday decline in almost two months. Jetblue rose less than 1% and Frontier fell 3.9%.

The decline in Frontier’s stock price since the original deal announceme­nt reduces the value of the merger.

In its latest proposal, reviewed by Spirit’s board in recent days, Jetblue offered to divest all Spirit assets in New York and Boston if needed to avoid gaining greater market share in those cities, the carrier said in a separate statement. It also could surrender gates and assets at other airports, including Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where Jetblue and Spirit both have a large presence.

“We have confidence that we can complete this transactio­n,” Jetblue CEO Robin Hayes said in the statement. “Spirit shareholde­rs would be better off with the certainty of our substantia­l cash premium, regulatory commitment­s and reverse breakup fee protection.”

Jetblue is evaluating possible next steps, a spokesman said. Whether Spirit shareholde­rs support the board’s choice will be determined at a required vote on the Frontier agreement. A date hasn’t been set.

“Assuming Spirit’s shareholde­rs do not pressure the board to reconsider, the option exists, albeit uncertain if it will be pursued, for Jetblue to escalate things and issue a formal proxy to put its offer for a side-by-side vote,” Savanthi Syth, a Raymond James analyst, said in a note Monday.

A regulatory review of Frontier’s proposed acquisitio­n of Spirit has been ongoing and it will be several months before the deal potentiall­y closes, Spirit CEO Ted Christie said in a memo to the airline’s employees.

Frontier declined to comment.

The Northeast Alliance between Jetblue and American already is the focus of a lawsuit by federal antitrust enforcers who say it gives the pair too much market concentrat­ion in Boston and New York.

Speculatio­n has grown that the U.S. Justice Department might not allow Jetblue to combine with Spirit and also keep the American alliance.

 ?? LUKE SHARRETT — BLOOMBERG ?? Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines signage is seen at Indianapol­is Internatio­nal Airport on Feb. 7.
LUKE SHARRETT — BLOOMBERG Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines signage is seen at Indianapol­is Internatio­nal Airport on Feb. 7.

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