Virgin America Inc., the airline backed by British
billionaire Richard Branson, is reportedly considering selling all or
part of the company.
The carrier is working with a financial adviser after receiving takeover interest, Bloomberg reported.
No decision has been made, and Virgin America may ultimately opt
against the sale, people with knowledge of the matter told the news
outlet. Bloomberg did not identify the sources as the matter is private.
Shares in Virgin America (NASDAQ:VA) jumped 13.14 percent to
$34.70 a share by 11:58 a.m. EDT, valuing the company at roughly $15
billion. The S&P 500, by contrast, was down 0.53 percent in late
morning trading.
A media contact for Virgin America did not immediately respond to a call for comment.
The Burlingame, California-based airline, which flies to
destinations throughout the United States and Mexico, began offering
flights in 2007. The low-cost carrier is best known for its upscale
aircraft interiors, including purple lighting and comfortable leather
seats, plus other perks such as onboard Wi-Fi. But Virgin America didn’t
report its first profit until 2013, earning $10.1 million on $1.4
billion of operating revenue.
Still, sales steadily climbed, and in November 2014 the carrier sold stock
in a $353 million initial public offering. The offering’s price of $23 a
share valued the airline at the time at nearly $973 million.
Branson, who has an estimated net work of $5.2 billion, owns
a 22 percent stake in Virgin America through a hedge fund and the
Virgin Group, the U.K. venture capital conglomerate he
founded. Branson’s investment in the airline is restricted by U.S.
foreign investment rules.
The mogul last week helped the airline launch a new route
from San Francisco to Denver — a leg meant to connect Silicon Valley
entrepreneurs with Denver’s brimming tech scene. “The Denver area, which
has been dubbed ‘Silicon Mountain’ because of its own booming
innovation economy, is today the No. 1 most requested destination by the
airline’s corporate clients,” Virgin America said in a March 14 press release.
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