San Diego Union-Tribune

SPIRIT STILL PREFERS BID FROM FRONTIER AIRLINES OVER JETBLUE

- BY DAVID KOENIG & MICHELLE CHAPMAN Koenig and Chapman write for The Associated Press.

Spirit Airlines said Monday that it still supports Frontier Airlines’ $2.9 billion takeover bid for the airline, saying it was more likely to win regulatory approval than JetBlue’s competing $3.6 billion offer.

Spirit said antitrust regulators are unlikely to approve JetBlue’s offer because of JetBlue’s alliance with American Airlines in the Northeast, a deal that the Justice Department is suing to block.

“We struggle to understand how JetBlue can believe” that the Justice Department or a court would let JetBlue strike a deal with American, then buy Spirit, eliminatin­g the nation’s largest low-cost airline, the Spirit board said in a letter to JetBlue directors.

JetBlue rejected Spirit’s view, especially after promising last week to make concession­s designed to assure regulatory approval of its offer. JetBlue’s CEO seemed to raise the possibilit­y of a hostile takeover bid.

Shares of Miramar, Fla.-based Spirit sank more than 9 percent in trading. New York-based JetBlue’s stock gained 2.6 percent, while shares of Denver-based Frontier fell more than 3 percent.

The developmen­t was a reversal from last month, when Spirit said that after speaking with financial and legal advisers, its directors believed JetBlue’s offer

“reasonably” turn out to be the better of the two deals.

Spirit said its board continues to back the bid made by Frontier in February and views it as the best way to maximize value. The airline anticipate­s a deal with Frontier closing in the second half of the year.

The JetBlue-American cooperativ­e venture in Boston and New York, called the Northeast Alliance or NEA, was opposed by Spirit and other competitor­s long before Frontier’s February bid to buy Spirit.

JetBlue tried to satisfy regulatory concerns by offering to divest Spirit’s airport gates and takeoff and landing slots in New York and Boston and maybe in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. However, Spirit’s board said Monday that the revised offer is unlikely to ap

pease regulators because the revised offer still “makes clear that JetBlue is unwilling to terminate” the partnershi­p with American.

A Spirit-Frontier merger would combine the nation’s two largest budget airlines and create the No. 5 U.S. carrier. While Spirit and Frontier are similar “ultralow-cost” carriers, JetBlue operates on a business model that is more like the big four — American, Delta, United and Southwest. JetBlue would absorb Spirit and eliminate a budget airline that regulators believe helps keep ticket prices lower.

JetBlue on Monday repeated the argument that its offer is better for Spirit shareholde­rs: It would pay them $33 per share in cash compared with Frontier’s cash-and-stock offer worth $22.42 per share, and JetBlue’s ofcould fer was sweetened to include a $200 million breakup fee if the deal falters.

“We hope the Spirit board will now recognize that ours is clearly a superior proposal and engage with us more constructi­vely than they have to date,” said JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes.

Hayes was far more blunt, even threatenin­g, throughout a five-page letter last week to Spirit Chairman Mac Gardner and CEO Ted Christie. Hayes wrote that his airline’s divestment promises should comfort Spirit leadership about JetBlue’s ability to win antitrust approval.

“While we would unquestion­ably prefer to negotiate a transactio­n with you, if you continue to refuse to constructi­vely engage with us so that we can deliver this value to your stockholde­rs, we are actively considerin­g all other options available to us,” Hayes wrote.

Frontier CEO Barry Biffle said last week that regulatory review of a Frontier-Spirit combinatio­n “is already well under way and many months ahead of any alternativ­e.”

When an analyst pressed Biffle on why Frontier hasn’t campaigned more aggressive­ly and publicly for its bid, he said, “We have been pretty clear” about how Frontier views the benefits of its offer. “I don’t think we have to keep repeating it.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE AP ?? Spirit said an offer from Frontier Airlines is more likely to win regulatory approval than a $3.6 billion bid from JetBlue.
MATT ROURKE AP Spirit said an offer from Frontier Airlines is more likely to win regulatory approval than a $3.6 billion bid from JetBlue.

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