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Airline SAS Gets US Court Approval to Secure New Equity Capital

2023-05-16 13:55
Scandinavian carrier SAS AB will start a process to secure new equity capital after getting the relevant clearance
Airline SAS Gets US Court Approval to Secure New Equity Capital

Scandinavian carrier SAS AB will start a process to secure new equity capital after getting the relevant clearance from a bankruptcy court in New York.

Stockholm-based SAS filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in July amid headwinds from the Covid-19 pandemic, high fuel prices and a pilot strike. The company has given potential equity investors a deadline of about 13 weeks to present final bids, according to a statement late on Monday.

The airline struggled last year to get the backing of its largest shareholders for a restructuring plan. While Denmark said it’s open to adding to its holding, Sweden’s government flagged it will accept a conversion of debt it is owed into equity, but won’t participate in a new capital raise. The two governments have a 21.8% stake each in SAS.

“Even though the capital injection plan now is on track — and that’s definitely good news for SAS’ survival — we still see an imminent risk that the existing shares will be worthless, or at best, almost worthless,” Jacob Pedersen, head of equity research at Sydbank, said in a note.

In April, Danish newspaper Berlingske reported that SAS would probably delist its shares since Apollo Global Management Inc. was planning to take a 70% stake in the airline. The Danish state would take the remaining 30%. Apollo provided the company with a $700 million debtor-in-possession term loan as part of Chapter 11.

SAS said it plans to complete bankruptcy proceedings in the US toward the end of this year. As part of that process the carrier needs to raise at least 9.5 billion Swedish kronor ($918 million) in new equity and convert or cut its debt pile of about 20 billion kronor.

Attracting new equity “will help drive our airline forward and facilitate our emergence from the chapter 11 process,” SAS Chief Executive Officer Anko van der Werff said.