EasyJet gets enough votes in favour of $524m share sale

Bloomberg

EasyJet Plc Chairman John Barton said he expects shareholders to approve the British carrier’s 419 million pound ($524 million) share sale, providing a financial buffer as it contends with a slow recovery from the coronavirus shutdown.
The Luton, England-based airline received proxy votes worth 60% of share capital in favour of the conditional part of a 703 pence-a-share equity raise announced last month, Barton told investors. EasyJet needed a simple majority to push ahead with the proposal. Final results will be announced later on.
After the equity increase, EasyJet has said it will have more than 3 billion pounds of cash, including funds raised from sale-and-leaseback transactions on its aircraft. Liquidity has been boosted by a slightly lower-than-expected cash burn as more customers opt to take vouchers for cancelled flights instead of asking for refunds.
The UK’s biggest discount carrier was among the first European airlines to start increasing flights as lockdowns eased, in the hope of salvaging the tail end of the summer season. EasyJet plans to operate 50% of its usual routes in July and 75% in August, though lower frequencies mean capacity will be down about 30% in the third quarter of the year.
EasyJet’s bid to counter the impact of the virus has been further complicated by feuding with founder and largest shareholder, Stelios Haji-Ioannou, who has used the crisis to press a long-held demand for the airline to cancel a large
aircraft order with Airbus SE. Following the share sale, Haji-Ioannou’s stake in the carrier will drop below 30%, the company said last month.
EasyJet’s pilots said they would hold a vote of no-confidence in COO Peter Bellew this week.

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