JetBlue ups ante for Spirit

FAN Editor

The battle for Spirit Airlines escalated Monday with JetBlue Airlines upping its offer for the budget carrier and imploring its board to negotiate in good faith.

This is its third proposal since March to acquire all the outstanding common stock of Spirit Airlines Inc., and it comes just days before its shareholders are supposed to vote on Frontier’s bid. 

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
SAVE SPIRIT AIRLINES INC. 21.94 +1.26 +6.09%
JBLU JETBLUE AIRWAYS CORP. 10.47 -0.06 -0.57%
ULCC FRONTIER GROUP HOLDINGS 10.09 +0.28 +2.85%

However, JetBlue made it clear it isn’t backing down, even after multiple rejections, saying in a letter to the budget carrier’s board of directors that it remains “fully committed to acquiring Spirit.” 

SPIRIT, FRONTIER AND JETBLUE: PROS AND CONS

JetBlue’s “improved superior proposal” includes a $350 million break-up fee, which is up from its previous offer of $150 million “and is $100 million greater than the amount being offered by Frontier,” the airline said. 

A JetBlue airliner lands past a Spirit Airlines jet on taxi way at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport on April 25, 2022. (Joe Cavaretta/Sun Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Those funds are payable to Spirit shareholders in the event that the deal flops.

JetBlue is also offering shareholders $31.50 per share in cash, which is up from its earlier offer of $30 per share. 

JETBLUE OFFERS TO BUY SPIRIT AIRLINES FOR ABOUT $3.6 BILLION CASH

“We urge you to consider our Improved Proposal, which you are permitted to do under the Frontier Agreement and are required to do in the exercise of your fiduciary duties, and negotiate with us in good faith to reach a consensual transaction…”

–  JetBlue Letter 6/6/2022  

In early May, Spirit’s board rejected JetBlue’s original $3.6 billion bid determining it is not a superior proposal to its previous agreement to merge with Frontier Airlines

Shortly after, Spirit Airlines’ board of directors recommended that its shareholders reject JetBlue’s $30 per share tender offer, arguing the takeover bid “has not addressed the core issue of the significant completion risk and insufficient protections for Spirit stockholders.”

Frontier CEO Barry Biffle previously said in a statement that Frontier was “pleased that the Spirit Board of Directors has again reaffirmed its commitment to combining with Frontier, which increases competition by bringing more ultra-low fares to more travelers and delivering substantial shareholder value.”  

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Frontier said its deal with Spirit is expected to “drive enhanced value for shareholders of both companies” and add “10,000 direct jobs and thousands of additional jobs at the companies’ business partners by 2026.”

Similarly, JetBlue is also arguing that “combining JetBlue and Spirit would create a true national competitor to the dominant legacy carriers, delivering low fares and a great experience for more customers, more opportunities and good paying jobs for Crewmembers and Team Members, and more value for stockholders.”

FOX Business’ Lucas Manfredi contributed to this report. 

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