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Frontier and Spirit stocks fall heading into key merger vote

ASSOCIATED PRESS / 2019
                                Frontier Airlines jets sit at gates at Denver International Airport in Denver. Shares of Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines tumbled Monday, June 27, 2022, after their improved merger proposal won a key endorsement just days ahead of a crucial shareholder vote.

ASSOCIATED PRESS / 2019

Frontier Airlines jets sit at gates at Denver International Airport in Denver. Shares of Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines tumbled Monday, June 27, 2022, after their improved merger proposal won a key endorsement just days ahead of a crucial shareholder vote.

Shares of Frontier Airlines and Spirit Airlines tumbled today after their improved merger proposal won a key endorsement just days ahead of a crucial shareholder vote.

Frontier CEO Barry Biffle said Monday that he is optimistic Spirit shareholders will approve Frontier’s latest stock-and-cash offer for Spirit when they vote Thursday.

“I think we have a lot of momentum, so we feel really good,” Biffle said in an interview.

Frontier is trying to fend off an attempt by JetBlue Airways to swoop in and grab Spirit with an all-cash bid worth about $3.6 billion.

Late on Monday, JetBlue raised to $400 million the breakup fee it would pay Spirit if antitrust regulators block it from buying the discount airline. JetBlue also increased to $2.50 a share a cash dividend that Spirit shareholders would get if they approve a sale to JetBlue.

Over the weekend, proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services reversed itself and recommended that Spirit shareholders approve the deal when they vote Thursday. ISS had initially opposed the proposal bolstering JetBlue’s effort.

Frontier’s shares closed Monday down more than 11% and Spirit dropped about 8%. JetBlue rose less than 2%.

Frontier’s bid was valued at $2.9 billion when announced in February, but has lost some value because of a decline in Frontier’s stock price. Frontier added $2 per share in cash and a larger reverse breakup fee to its offer late Friday, prompting the new evaluation by ISS.

Denver-based Frontier and Spirit, based in Miramar, Florida, say that antitrust regulators won’t let New York-based JetBlue buy Spirit. JetBlue disputes that claim and accuses the other side of inflating the projected value of a Frontier-Spirit combination.

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