Virgin Atlantic Sells Jets to Pay Off Rescuer Davidson Kempner
An Airbus SAS A330 passenger aircraft, operated by Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd., prepares to land at Heathrow airport, in London, U.K. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

Virgin Atlantic Sells Jets to Pay Off Rescuer Davidson Kempner

Bookmark

Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. sold two Boeing Co. 787 jetliners to fund the repayment of a loan from hedge fund Davidson Kempner Capital Management that formed the basis of a hard-won rescue last year.

The planes were bought by Griffin Global Asset Management and Bain Capital Credit, Virgin Atlantic said in a statement Friday. The sale and leaseback deal, which allows the airline to go on operating the aircraft, raised $230 million.

After paying off the balance of the $170 million borrowed from New York-based Davidson Kempner at the height of the coronavirus crisis, Virgin Atlantic will have 70 million pounds ($96 million) left for its own funds.

The loan from Davidson helped save Virgin after Britain refused it access to state funding tapped by half a dozen other airlines, setting management off on a six-month search for backers. Billionaire founder Richard Branson also injected 200 million pounds raised through the sale of shares in his Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. space venture as part of a 1.2 billion-pound package.

Bain Capital’s involvement in the 787 transaction comes after the private-equity firm rescued the U.K. airline’s sister-carrier, Virgin Australia Holdings Ltd., after it called in administrators in March.

Virgin Atlantic, which is 49% owned by Delta Air Lines Inc., has also cut more than 3,000 jobs and shuttered operations at London Gatwick airport as part of its survival strategy.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.