Analysts Say US Airways’ New Delta Bid Is Tempting
January 10, 2007, 2:57 pm
After crunching the numbers on US Airways‘ latest bid for Delta Air Lines, several equity analysts said Wednesday that it seemed to present a better payout for creditors than Delta’s standalone reorganization plan. Their estimates were slightly different, but three of them calculated that US Airways was offering at least $2 billion more than Delta would be worth if it emerged from bankruptcy on its own. Their analysis suggests that US Airways’ new offer, consisting of $10.2 billion in cash and stock, may get serious consideration from Delta’s creditors.
“US Airways believes a merger with Delta can produce $1.65 billion of annual synergies, which, we think is doable,” Merrill Lynch’s Michael Linnenberg wrote in a research note Wednesday. He said a combination would produce a value of $12.7 billion to $15.4 billion, with a midpoint of $14.1 billion. That compares to a value of $10.7 billion, at the midpoint, under the Delta plan.
“While it is likely that a US Airways/Delta merger could take longer to close than Delta emerging from bankruptcy, one cannot ignore the magnitude of the cash component of the US Airways offer,” Mr. Linnenberg wrote.
Bear Stearns’ David Strine wrote that US Airways is offering $2 billion to $3.5 billion more for Delta’s creditors than they can expect under Delta’s plan.
Kevin Crissey of UBS said US Airways’ new offer is “significantly above” the value of Delta’s plan, “by at least $2 billion.” He also suggested that the raised bid could provide “political cover” for creditors who want to support a merger with US Airways but are leery of angering Delta’s management.
But money is not the only issue for the members of Delta’s official creditors committee, Mr. Crissey wrote:
January 10, 2007, 2:57 pm
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After crunching the numbers on US Airways‘ latest bid for Delta Air Lines, several equity analysts said Wednesday that it seemed to present a better payout for creditors than Delta’s standalone reorganization plan. Their estimates were slightly different, but three of them calculated that US Airways was offering at least $2 billion more than Delta would be worth if it emerged from bankruptcy on its own. Their analysis suggests that US Airways’ new offer, consisting of $10.2 billion in cash and stock, may get serious consideration from Delta’s creditors.
“US Airways believes a merger with Delta can produce $1.65 billion of annual synergies, which, we think is doable,” Merrill Lynch’s Michael Linnenberg wrote in a research note Wednesday. He said a combination would produce a value of $12.7 billion to $15.4 billion, with a midpoint of $14.1 billion. That compares to a value of $10.7 billion, at the midpoint, under the Delta plan.
“While it is likely that a US Airways/Delta merger could take longer to close than Delta emerging from bankruptcy, one cannot ignore the magnitude of the cash component of the US Airways offer,” Mr. Linnenberg wrote.
Bear Stearns’ David Strine wrote that US Airways is offering $2 billion to $3.5 billion more for Delta’s creditors than they can expect under Delta’s plan.
Kevin Crissey of UBS said US Airways’ new offer is “significantly above” the value of Delta’s plan, “by at least $2 billion.” He also suggested that the raised bid could provide “political cover” for creditors who want to support a merger with US Airways but are leery of angering Delta’s management.
But money is not the only issue for the members of Delta’s official creditors committee, Mr. Crissey wrote:
The creditors’ committee has divergent interests and, among others, includes [the Air Line Pilots Association] (Delta’s pilots) that won’t be won over by a higher bid and Boeing which is likely more interested in future orders than a higher claims recovery.
A research note from Jamie Baker of J.P. Morgan did not directly compare the valuations of the two proposals, but it called US Airways’ new bid “attractive” and suggested that the ball is now in Delta’s court. “If Delta hopes to pursue its standalone plan, management must move quickly to resist sweetened terms,” the analyst wrote