Air France-KLM agrees option for Virgin Atlantic ownership in event of hard Brexit
[BERLIN] Air France-KLM, Delta Air Lines and Virgin Atlantic have agreed a so-called 'put' option with Virgin Group that allows Virgin Atlantic to remain in majority UK ownership in the event of a hard Brexit.
Richard Branson's Virgin Group on Thursday said it would sell a 31 per cent stake in Virgin Atlantic to Air France-KLM, reducing its stake to 20 per cent. US carrier Delta remains the largest shareholder with a 49 per cent stake.
At present, Virgin Atlantic must be majority owned by EU investors to retain its operating rights as a European carrier, but it is not clear what ownership rules will look like after Britain's exit from the European Union.
"The put option means we can easily, immediately restore UK citizenship into the stake of Virgin Atlantic if it was necessary or mandatory after Brexit," Frederic Gagey, CFO of Air France-KLM said on Friday.
He added he was confident there would be a liberal air traffic rights deal between Britain and the United States after Brexit. Currently, Virgin Atlantic has unlimited flying rights to the United States thanks to the EU-US Open Skies deal.
Air France-KLM will also remain EU majority-owned even if UK shareholdings become non-EU after Brexit, despite Delta and China Eastern planning to take 10 per cent stakes, executives added.
Mr Gagey said he estimates around 6-7 per cent of the group is currently owned by UK investors.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
EV automakers get reprieve in US tax credit rules
Abu Dhabi hub carrier Etihad adds banks to US$1 billion IPO
Luminar to cut nearly 20% jobs as part of restructuring
Chinese share of French EV market slumps after incentives curbed
Ferrari unveils US$423,000 sports car with 1960s bloodline
Airbus called for compensation to take on money-losing Spirit operations: sources