Spirit shareholders should vote for Frontier offer, proxy adviser recommends

Frontier Group Holdings Inc.’s sweetened deal for Spirit Airlines Inc. got a nod from Institutional Shareholder Services Inc., one of the two largest independent services meant to advise investors on important shareholder votes.

Frontier
ULCC,
-11.20%
late Friday increased its offer for Spirit
SAVE,
-7.95%,
trying to fend off JetBlue Airways Corp.
JBLU,
+1.62%,
which surprised investors in April with its own proposal for Spirit and also has put improved offers on the table. Frontier and Spirit announced their deal in February.

Late Monday, JetBlue boosted its offer as well, raising the fee it would have to pay Spirit if the deal wouldn’t clear antitrust hurdles, to $400 million from $350 million, and hiked its prepayment offer to $2.50 a share, payable as a cash dividend to Spirit shareholders “promptly following” a shareholder vote approving a merger with JetBlue. JetBue also added a “ticking fee,” a monthly prepayment of 10 cents a share between January 2023 and the closing or termination of the deal.

Frontier and Spirit shares fell Monday, while shares of JetBlue were one of the few gainers amid a downdraft for the broader equity market.

ISS had previously urged Spirit shareholders to reject Frontier’s offer. Glass Lewis, the other shareholder proxy service, has kept its recommendation in favor of the Frontier merger.

Frontier late Friday increased the per-share offer by $2 and raised the fee it would pay if the deal runs afoul antitrust matters to $350 million. That fee matched JetBlue’s until JetBlue’s action late Monday.

Frontier is also offering 1.9126 of its shares per Spirit share, which would allow “Spirit shareholders to benefit from the potential upside of the combined company and the expected $500 million of synergies,” ISS said in its recent note.

Frontier is also offering Spirit shareholders to prepay $2.22 a share in cash following merger approval, while JetBlue offered to prepay $2.50, an increase of $1 from JetBlue’s previous offer.

JetBlue’s proposal “caps the potential upside for Spirit shareholders – if an agreement is struck at the currently proposed terms, Spirit shareholders could not receive more than $33.50 per share in cash, even if the value of the combined company’s synergies prove to be higher,” ISS said.

In contrast, there’s a potential upside of owning 48.5% of a combined Spirit and Frontier, which “could benefit from a recovery in the U.S. airline industry.”

Spirit shares have traded above $33.50 from February to June and that could be seen as “an indicator of where standalone Spirit shares could trade in the event of an industry recovery,” ISS said.

Frontier’s improved offer came as a surprise, analyst Savanthi Syth at Raymond James said in a note Monday. “We had believed the probability to be low that Frontier would improve its offer,” Syth said.

Frontier on Monday issued a letter to Spirit shareholders, urging them to support the deal and calling JetBlue’s an “illusory proposal, which lacks any realistic likelihood of obtaining regulatory approval.”

JetBlue said late Friday it continues to believe its offer is “decisively superior to the Frontier transaction, even considering its revised terms.”

On Monday, JetBlue said it had engaged with Spirit shareholders directly and modified its proposal “in response to shareholders’ expressed interest.”

The special shareholder meeting is scheduled for Thursday.

Shares of Spirit are up 3% this year, while Frontier shares are down 31% and JetBlue shares have lost 39% in the same period. That compares with losses of about 18% for the S&P 500 index
SPX,
-0.30%
and 19% for the U.S. Global JETS ETF
JETS,
-2.07%.

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