
"Spirit Aviation Holdings, Inc., parent company of the Dania Beach-based budget carrier, announced it received approval Friday from the court in the Southern District of New York for up to $475 million in debtor-in-possesion financing from its existing bondholders. The company also won court approvals for a complex agreement with AerCap Ireland Limited, its largest aircraft lessor, to restructure an array of leases in a move that will funnel $150 million to the airline and end leases on 27 planes."
""These approvals mark an important milestone in the Company's ongoing Chapter 11 restructuring to position Spirit for the future," the company said in a prepared statement. Of the total financing, $200 million is "immediately available" to the company. The AerCap deal resolves "all claims and disputes" between Spirit and the leasing firm. It also allows Spirit to cut operating costs "by hundreds of millions of dollars and provides for the future delivery of 30 aircraft. The company continues to make progress with other lessors as it pursues its fleet optimization strategy.""
""We are pleased to have reached another significant milestone in our restructuring, which represents continued progress toward securing a successful future for Spirit," said Dave Davis, president and chief executive officer. "With these approvals in place, we are better equipped to build a stronger airline that delivers unmatched value to American consumers. We thank our stakeholders for their support and the Spirit team for their dedication and resilience during this process.""
Spirit Aviation Holdings received court approval for up to $475 million in debtor-in-possession financing from existing bondholders, with $200 million immediately available. The company obtained court approval to restructure leases with AerCap Ireland Limited, a move that will deliver $150 million to Spirit and terminate leases on 27 aircraft. The AerCap deal resolves all claims and disputes and allows Spirit to cut operating costs by hundreds of millions while permitting future delivery of 30 aircraft. Spirit intends to drop 87 planes from a 214-Airbus fleet. The carrier filed for Chapter 11 protection on Aug. 29, its second filing within a year. The approvals aim to position Spirit for the future and support fleet optimization.
Read at Sun Sentinel
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]