Companies Place Bids for Virgin America Takeover JetBlue Airways and Alaska Air Group have both made offers.
By Reuters
Our biggest sale — Get unlimited access to Entrepreneur.com at an unbeatable price. Use code SAVE50 at checkout.*
Claim Offer*Offer only available to new subscribers
This story originally appeared on Reuters
Virgin America Inc. has received takeover bids from JetBlue Airways Corp. and Alaska Air Group Inc. as the U.S. budget airline backed by British billionaire Richard Branson explores a sale, a person familiar with the matter said Monday.
Asian airlines have also expressed interest in buying Virgin America, although they would have to partner with a U.S. bidder under foreign ownership rules governing U.S. airlines.
The source asked not to be identified because the sale process is confidential.
JetBlue, Alaska Air and Burlingame, California-based Virgin America declined to comment.
In the past year, Virgin America has faced steep declines in unit revenue, or sales relative to flight capacity, as bigger rivals have added seats to gain share and take advantage of lower fuel costs that make it cheaper to operate flights. A tie-up with another airline could give Virgin America more flights that would help it compete.
Analysts said a deal could make sense particularly for New York-based JetBlue, which has room to grow on the U.S. West Coast. Both carriers fly the same type of aircraft, which means JetBlue would not need to train pilots or maintenance crew on how to operate Virgin America's planes.
Buyers would benefit from Virgin America's corporate accounts with major technology companies such as Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Inc., Sterne Agee CRT analyst Adam Hackel said.
A buyer would have to assume Virgin America's aircraft leases, likely at above market rates, however, and might have to hike its pilots' lower-than-average wages, JPMorgan analyst Jamie Baker said in a research note last week after news of a potential sale broke.
Mega-mergers among larger U.S. airlines in the past decade have reduced the industry to four top players: American, Delta, United and Southwest, which control more than 80 percent of the market.
MJ Moltenbrey, a partner at law firm Paul Hastings and a former director at the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust division, said a deal with JetBlue or Alaska Air would likely pass an antitrust review.
"A combination of two of the smaller airlines would result in significant efficiencies by giving them a bigger footprint, and would make the merged airline a more effective competitor to the big three," Moltenbrey said.
News of the offers, first reported by Bloomberg, pushed Virgin America's stock up 10 percent, while JetBlue rose 3 percent and Alaska Air gained 1 percent.
Virgin America went public in November 2014 and has a market capitalization of $1.3 billion.
(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis and Jeffrey Dastin in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Grant McCool)