The US investment firm trying to buy
easyJet has gone public with its latest £4.7bn takeover proposal for the budget airline, its third and latest offer to be rejected.
Castlelake said on Monday that an all-cash offer of 625p a share, valuing
easyJet at just over £4.7bn, had been rejected by the airline’s board on Sunday, after previous offers at 560p and 600p.
Castlelake said it had now decided to make the bid public so that
easyJet shareholders could evaluate it before a takeover deadline on Friday.“
Castlelake expected that the third proposal would elicit prompt engagement from the
easyJet board,” the company said. “Following the rejection of three proposals by the
easyJet Board, and given its unwillingness to engage meaningfully,
Castlelake is announcing this third proposal to enable
easyJet shareholders to consider its merits and provide their views on the third proposal to the
easyJet board.”Under City takeover rules,
Castlelake, which is headquartered in
Minneapolis and manages $36bn (£27bn) in assets, has until 5pm on 26 June to announce whether it intends to make an offer for
easyJet.
Castlelake also said it has partnered with two investors to meet EU regulations whereby European airlines must be majority-owned by investors within the region. This rule still applies to
easyJet, even after Brexit.The company said it had partnered with
Peter Bellew, a former chief operating officer at
Riyadh Air,
easyJet and
Ryanair, and the former chief executive of
Malaysia Airlines. Bellew runs Dooks Capital, a seed investment and advisory firm focused on AI in aviation, which he founded last September and operates out of
Saudi Arabia.The second partner is
Mark Breen, the chief executive of Dublin-based
Oneiros Aerospace, whose previous experience includes working for Oman Air.“The third proposal includes these EU national partners investing and participating in the proposed acquisition of the company through their ownership and control of an EU company,” said
Castlelake. “This EU partner will hold a controlling shareholding in the overall structure. The EU partner will at all times be owned and controlled by EU nationals.“This proposed structure is consistent with structures adopted by a number of other European airlines that are subject to the same EU ownership rules as the company.
Castlelake is confident that this is a clear, deliverable solution to ensure compliance with all applicable regulatory requirements.”
Castlelake made its first approach earlier this month, saying it intended to make an offer of at least 403p, which valued
easyJet at £3bn.On Monday,
easyJet said
Castlelake is trying to buy the airline “on the cheap”, and said that its proposed ownership structure of the carrier is “opaque”.“The board believes that the third proposal represents an opportunistic attempt to acquire
easyJet ‘on the cheap’ and that it is therefore not in the best interests of
easyJet shareholders,” the company said.“The board of
easyJet carefully considered the third proposal with its advisers and concluded that it is highly opportunistic, delivered against the backdrop of
easyJet’s temporarily depressed share price, and still fundamentally undervalues
easyJet and its prospects.“The premium, multiple and future share price analyses presented by
Castlelake are based primarily on Middle East conflict-affected share prices, short-term earnings and analyst reports.”Before news of takeover interest emerged, shares in
easyJet had lost about a fifth of their value since the start of the year.The airline’s share price has risen by 36% over the last month amid prospects of a takeover. Early on Monday morning, the stock gained 2% to 515p.In October, reports emerged that the Swiss-headquartered shipping company MSC was considering a takeover of the business. In 2021,
easyJet rejected an approach from the rival airline Wizz Air.
easyJet, which is headquartered in Luton, England, and employs more than 16,000 people around the world, is one of Europe’s three biggest low-cost airlines, behind
Ryanair, with Wizz Air in third place.
Castlelake is led by executive chair and founder Rory O’Neill. It entered talks in January with the bankrupt US carrier Spirit Airlines over a possible takeover.
Castlelake previously bailed out collapsed Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) and then sold on its shares to Air France-KLM.