Alaska Air, Virgin America Get U.S. Nod for Merger
December 06 2016 - 5:30PM
Dow Jones News
The Justice Department on Tuesday approved Alaska Air Group
Inc.'s acquisition of Virgin America Inc., but imposed conditions
requiring Alaska Air to scale back its route partnership with
American Airlines Group Inc.
The $2.6 billion merger deal, struck in April, would create the
fifth-largest U.S. airline by traffic, surpassing JetBlue Airways
Corp., which lost a bidding war with Alaska Air for Virgin
America.
Even after the merger, the combined carrier would control just
6% of the domestic market, compared with the four U.S. giants that
control more than 80% as a result of a series of megamergers since
2008.
The Justice Department said the modifications to the partnership
with American would ensure Alaska Air has the incentive to compete
as vigorously with American as Virgin America does today, going
head-to-head on 20 nonstop routes. Under Alaska's route-sharing
pact with American, called a code-sharing deal, each carrier sells
certain flights belonging to its partner as if they were its
own.
Alaska Air currently markets American flights on more than 250
routes, while American sells seats on 80 Alaska Air routes, a
Justice Department official said, resulting in the two airlines
often behaving more as partners than competitors.
Alaska Air also has a code-sharing agreement with Delta Air
Lines Inc., which wasn't mentioned in the Justice Department's
proposed settlement.
Brandon Pedersen, Alaska Air's chief financial officer, on
Tuesday said his company currently derives $190 million in annual
revenue from the American code-share pact and $65 million from that
with Delta.
Mr. Pedersen said there are only about 45 markets where Alaska
Air would lose existing code-share revenue because of the
curtailments to its American partnership, with the net financial
impact being $15 million to $20 million a year. He estimated Alaska
Air could recapture $40 million to $45 million of lost code-share
revenue by replacing it with more of its own planes and
passengers.
Antitrust enforcers said they would prohibit Alaska Air and
American, the nation's top airline by traffic, from code-sharing on
routes where Virgin America and American compete today, as well as
on routes where Alaska would otherwise be likely to launch new
service in combination with American following the merger. But they
would be able to continue code-sharing in limited circumstances,
the Justice Department said.
The Justice Department also said it would require Alaska Air to
seek approval before selling or leasing any of the gates or slots
Virgin America won in a settlement that allowed regulators to
green-light the huge American-US Airways merger in late 2013.
Virgin America, based in San Francisco, began flying in 2007.
After finally becoming profitable in 2013, it went public the
following year. It is much smaller than 84-year-old Alaska Air and
operates a different type of aircraft. But its stylish service and
cult following was part of the lure that drove the bidding for it
up to $57 a share, a 47% premium.
The parties face another potential hurdle, however. In
September, a consumer lawsuit seeking to prevent the merger on
antitrust grounds was filed in federal court in San Francisco. The
judge has scheduled a trial for next Monday, to be preceded by a
mandatory settlement conference and pretrial hearing slated for
Wednesday.
Now that antitrust regulators have blessed the transaction, it
remains to be seen if the trial would move ahead. The judge also
ordered Alaska Air to give at least seven calendar day's notice to
the plaintiffs before closing the transaction, which the company
has said it would abide by.
Mr. Pedersen said Alaska Air wants to close the Virgin deal "as
soon as possible" and that timing will depend on the disposition of
the lawsuit. "We'll know much more tomorrow with our meetings with
the judge," he said. A Justice Department official said the San
Francisco judge would have to decide how to proceed.
Joseph Alioto, a San Francisco antitrust lawyer who is leading
the consumer lawsuit, on Tuesday called the Justice Department's
proposed remedies "abominable" and said one option would be to ask
the judge to stay the closing of the deal until the bench trial has
concluded. He reiterated his intention "is to provide this merger
should be prohibited."
Seattle-based Alaska Air has raised $1.5 billion in financing
for the deal and already has booked $36 million in one-time merger
expenses. The combination would give it and Virgin America the
largest seat-share on the West Coast, lift them to second-largest
carrier in San Francisco and make them more relevant, with an 11%
seat share, in the fragmented Los Angeles International Airport
market.
Write to Susan Carey at susan.carey@wsj.com and Brent Kendall at
brent.kendall@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 06, 2016 17:15 ET (22:15 GMT)
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