Quantcast
Sun Country Air backs rival’s merger, plans to stay independent – Metro US

Sun Country Air backs rival’s merger, plans to stay independent

FILE PHOTO: A logo of low cost carrier Spirit Airlines
FILE PHOTO: A logo of low cost carrier Spirit Airlines is pictured on an Airbus plane in Colomiers near Toulouse

By Padraic Halpin

DUBLIN (Reuters) -The head of Sun Country Airlines threw his backing behind a potential merger in the ultra-low-cost airline sector in the United States, saying it would be good for consumers.

Frontier Airlines and JetBlue Airways are battling for Spirit Airlines, which this month rejected an enhanced offer from JetBlue, saying it had low chances of regulatory approval compared to Spirit’s agreed Frontier deal.

“We’re pro this deal happening with either of the two counterparties … hopefully it happens before the end of the year,” Chief Executive Jude Bricker told the Airline Economics conference.

“I think it makes a ton of sense for everybody involved, including and importantly, the consumer,” he added.

White House National Economic Council Director Brian Deese

has said the Biden administration takes “very seriously” the impact of industry consolidation.

“My view is that the two carriers acting as one in the U.S. will be better for us and that we’ll see more rational pricing generally and I think it will be a net positive,” Bricker said.

“I think it makes sense and I certainly agree with Frontier and Spirit’s assertion that it’s good for the consumer, it’s good for the staff of both airlines. And it’s going to be good for investors. I hope it happens.”

Sun Country Airlines itself is not looking for acquisitions and plans to remain standalone, Bricker said.

“Our focus is to remain independent and continue to produce the kind of results we have done. Being our size, we can’t be acquisitive. I think we’ve got a really good thing going that focuses just on execution for us right now.”

U.S. airlines face a strong recovery, Bricker said.

“The whole world is just really tight right now. And at the same time, we’re seeing in our case unit revenues in the second quarter of ’22, expand over unit revenues in the second quarter 2019 and pre-COVID by about 30%. So it’s a massive, massive demand recovery.”

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin, Editing by Tim Hepher and David Evans)