Delta Buys Stake In Latam Airlines, Besting American -- WSJ
27 Settembre 2019 - 9:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Alison Sider
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (September 27, 2019).
Delta Air Lines Inc. is taking a stake in South America's
biggest airline, winning out over rival American Airlines Group
Inc., which had also sought to work through that carrier to deepen
its presence in Latin America.
Delta said Thursday that it intends to buy a 20% stake in
Chile-based Latam Airlines Group SA for $1.9 billion in cash and
newly issued debt. That would be Delta's biggest investment since
merging with Northwest Airlines over a decade ago.
"This is the biggest region of the world that we had an open
space," Delta's Chief Executive Ed Bastian said in an interview.
"This largely completes the map."
The new partnership spells the end of a three-year effort by
American Airlines to deepen cooperation with Latam.
Chilean antitrust regulators initially approved joint business
agreements between Latam, American and the parent company of
British Airways and Iberia, but the country's Supreme Court
rejected the arrangement in May. American said the ruling would
have reduced the benefits of the partnership by excluding
Chile.
"We understand Latam's decision to partner with a U.S. carrier
that isn't burdened by the ruling," American said. The airline
added that it doesn't expect the switch to have a significant
financial impact on American.
The new tie-up leaves American without a partner in Latin
America as its competitors pair off in the fast-growing region for
air travel. United Airlines Holdings Inc. is pursuing a joint
business agreement with Colombian carrier Avianca Holdings in
conjunction with Copa Holdings SA of Panama.
Latam Airlines, formed by the 2012 joining of Chile's Lan and
Brazil's Tam airlines, has significant operations in Argentina,
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, serving 143 destinations
in all. American depository receipt shares of Latam surged around
45% in after-hours trading following the news.
Mr. Bastian said that network hardly overlaps with Delta's
existing routes, giving him confidence regulators will approve the
investment. The partnership would make Delta the largest carrier of
passengers between the U.S. and South America, he said. Delta said
the airlines expect to receive approval for the deal in one to two
years.
The Latam partnership is Delta's latest equity investment to
expand its global reach. The carrier owns 49% stakes in Grupo
Aeromexico and Virgin Atlantic Ltd., as well as smaller investments
in Air France-KLM SA, China Eastern Airlines Corp, and Korean Air
Lines Co. Ltd. A Delta spokesman said the airline will exit its 9%
stake in Brazil's Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes SA in the coming
months.
Under the new arrangement with Delta, Latam will leave the
Oneworld alliance of which American is a part. Mr. Bastian said he
doesn't know yet whether Latam will join Delta and other partners
in the SkyTeam alliance, but he is expecting the airline to remain
unaligned.
In addition to its equity stake in Latam, Delta will also buy
some of Latam's planes: four Airbus SE A350s already in Latam's
fleet with commitments to buy 10 more due to be delivered in the
coming years. Delta will also gain representation on Latam's
board.
Write to Alison Sider at alison.sider@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 27, 2019 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
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