© Reuters. A Spirit Airlines aircraft prepares to depart San Diego International Airport in San Diego, California, U.S., January 16, 2024 after a federal judge on Tuesday blocked JetBlue Airways planned $3.8 billion acquisition of ultra-low-cost carrier. REUTERS/Mi
(Reuters) -Spirit Airlines on Thursday said it has been taking and will continue to take prudent steps to ensure the strength of its balance sheet and ongoing operations.
The comments came as the company’s shares extended losses to a third session on Thursday over investor concerns about its financial future after a U.S. judge blocked its $3.8 billion merger with JetBlue Airways (NASDAQ:).
Spirit was down about 12% in midday trade. Since the court’s ruling on Tuesday, a number of analysts have downgraded its stock and its shares have shed more than half of their value.
“Although JetBlue and Spirit can still appeal Tuesday’s court ruling, it is unclear why JetBlue wouldn’t cut its losses here and recognize that it avoided a risky bid on a highly levered carrier with steep losses,” Citi analyst Stephen Trent wrote in a note.
JetBlue shares were up about 3% in midday trade.
Rating agency Fitch on Wednesday said that Spirit’s credit profile is under pressure as it faces significant refinancing risk in the next year with its $1.1 billion loyalty program debt coming due in September 2025.
Spirit has been among the carriers hardest hit by a snag with RTX’s Pratt & Whitney Geared Turbofan (GTF) engines. It is the largest operator of GTF-powered aircraft in the United States.
Meanwhile, excess industry capacity in its key markets is hurting its pricing power, forcing the company to indulge in promotional activity with steep discounting to fill up its planes.
Some analysts have said that the company might contemplate a bankruptcy filing to streamline its balance sheet and reorganize into a financially robust airline.
Spirit, however, said it is “confident” in its strengths and strategy and remains committed to delivering affordable fares.
The company entered into sale-leaseback transactions this month for 25 aircraft, which provided it about $419 million in cash.
The company said it is changing its aircraft delivery schedule through the end of the decade and slowing capacity growth in the near term.
The carrier also has plans to cut $100 million in structural costs.
Spirit’s ratio of enterprise value to sales for the next 12 months is 1.3, compared with 0.6 for JetBlue, according to LSEG data. A low ratio implies a more attractive investment opportunity.