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LONDON, June 24 (Reuters) - Budget airline easyJet
on Wednesday sought to raise up to 450 million pounds ($559.31
million) via a share placement to help it navigate the COVID-19
pandemic after reporting a bigger first-half loss.
The airline, which grounded its fleet on March 30, has said
it does not expect passenger demand to recover to pre-pandemic
levels until 2023.
The company said it would raise 400-450 million pounds by
placing up to 59.5 million shares, equivalent to 15% of its
share capital. A bookrunner said the placement was
oversubscribed, adding the shares would be priced at 703 pence
each, a 5% discount to Wednesday's close.
"We have been decisive in meeting the challenges of the
pandemic," Chief Executive Officer Johan Lundgren said, noting
the airline had already secured 1.7 billion pounds of an
expected 2 billion in additional funding.
EasyJet said more customers than expected had rebooked or
taken a voucher instead of a refund. That, combined with the
share placement, a government-backed loan and other measures,
should give it an higher-than-expected cash balance of more than
three billion pounds, it said.
The airline, which has joined a legal challenge to the UK's
newly-introduced quarantine rules, plans to ramp-up flights in
the next two months after restarting a minimal service last week
It aims to operate 30% of planned pre-COVID-19 capacity in
Q4 and pointed to "encouraging" bookings for easyJet Holidays,
but did not provide financial guidance.
EasyJet said "underlying" trading was ahead of expectations,
although its pretax loss widened to 353 million pounds for the
six months ended March 31 from 272 million pounds a year ago as
flying restrictions rendered fuel hedges ineffective.
The company also said it would begin a "progressive"
employee consultation process this month, having already
announced it will cut 4,500 jobs.
($1 = 0.8046 pounds)
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka in Bengaluru and Alistair Smout
in London; Editing by Shailesh Kuber, Kirsten Donovan)