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Alaska Air to buy Virgin America for $2.6 billion
Reuters
Apr. 4, 2016 12:55 pm
NEW YORK - Alaska Air said Monday it would buy Virgin America for $2.6 billion to become the top carrier on the West Coast and compete more effectively with larger airlines.
The deal appears to end what Alaska Air Chief Executive Officer Brad Tilden called a 'hard-fought competition” to purchase Virgin America.
JetBlue also had made an offer for the offshoot of billionaire Richard Branson's London-based Virgin Group, which had become famous for its mood lighting and media-rich entertainment on flights.
The deal would create the fifth-largest U.S. airline after a decade of mergers that have shrunk the industry to a handful of companies. The top four control more than 80 percent of the U.S. travel market.
Virgin America accounts for about 1.5 percent of U.S. domestic flight capacity, while Alaska Air and its Horizon Air subsidiary account for 5 percent, Deutsche Bank analyst Michael Linenberg wrote in a recent research note.
The companies face major hurdles in the integration, although Alaska Air expressed confidence in its ability to tackle them.
It must juggle the contracts of workers with disparate pay, benefits and seniority. Alaska Air said its unions and pilot leadership were on board with the merger.
The company also will have to train pilots and maintenance crews on a new aircraft type from Virgin America's fleet of Airbus A320-family planes. Alaska Air flies Boeing 737s.
Alaska Air said it might continue to use the Virgin America brand in some form.
The company said it was buying California-based Virgin America to expand in Los Angeles and San Francisco and offer more connections to international airline partners. It also would benefit from Virgin America's corporate contracts and cultlike status among travelers who work for technology companies.
The combined company would retain Alaska Air's Seattle headquarters.
'While California is actually our second-biggest state in terms of flying, we don't fly east-west out of there,” Tilden told reporters on a conference call Monday, noting the company had been considering an acquisition for a couple years.
'We'll go from serving one out of the top 10 destinations out of San Francisco to serving all 10.”
Alaska Air said in a statement that the deal would generate $225 million in annual synergies once the companies are fully merged. It expects one-time integration costs of $300 million to $350 million.
Because of the deal, Alaska Air plans to slow down its share repurchase program this year and probably next, Chief Financial Officer Brandon Pedersen said.
The companies said they expected the deal to receive the necessary approvals from Virgin America shareholders and U.S. regulators by Jan. 1.
Alaska Air Chief Operating Officer Ben Minicucci said he expected few antitrust concerns because the two companies have 'minimal” overlap of routes.
Sterne Agee CRT analyst Adam Hackel said the deal would help Alaska Air compete with Delta Air Lines and American Airlines, which have embarked on major expansions in Los Angeles.
An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-800 taxis at San Francisco International Airport, San Francisco, California, February 16, 2015. Alaska Air Group Inc said on April 4, 2016, that it would buy Virgin America Inc for $2.6 billion to compete more effectively with larger airlines and become the top carrier on the U.S. West Coast. (REUTERS/Louis Nastro/Files)
File photo of Virgin America flights landing in San Francisco, California, August 8, 2007. (REUTERS/John Decker Virgin America/Pool)

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