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Spirit Airlines cancels Airbus Order in Settlement with AerCap

Spirit Airlines, in an effort to optimize its fleet, will not purchase 52 Airbus aircraft and its options on 10 more. AerCap will take over the aircraft orders.

The agreement between Spirit and AerCap was approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York on Friday as part of a settlement of disputes.

Spirit's second bankruptcy was triggered by a dispute with the largest aircraft leasing company in the world.

AerCap abruptly cancelled the lease agreements of 36 Airbus A320neo jets scheduled to be delivered to Spirit in 2027-2028. The company also claimed that Spirit had defaulted on leases of 37 aircraft in its operational fleet.

Spirit disputed AerCap's validity. The company's access to its fleet, both current and future, was compromised. It had no choice but to file for bankruptcy.

Spirit will not renew 27 of its 37 leases as part of a settlement reached between the two parties. AerCap was given permission to use the $9.7 million cash security deposits provided by Spirit for the cancelled aircraft leases.

The Irish leasing giant has also been given permission to make a claim against Spirit for up to $572,000,000 in total. The amount of money that Spirit will be able collect is still unknown.

Spirit will relinquish all rights to the undeliverable jets. It will also sign lease agreements with AerCap to acquire 30 new Airbus A320 and A321 aircraft for delivery evenly spread across 2027-2028-2029.

AerCap will inject $150 million in cash into the bankrupt airline as part of this deal.

Spirit also announced that the court had approved a debtor in possession ("DIP") facility up to $475 millions from its existing bondholders. The carrier has immediate access to $200 million of the total financing.

Spirit stated that the agreement would allow it to cut operating costs by hundreds and millions of dollars.

Spirit intends to shrink its operation to cut costs. It has decided that approximately 1,800 flight crew members, or about one third of its cabin staff, will be furloughed on December 1.

The carrier plans to reduce its fleet, which is currently 214 aircraft strong, by 100 aircraft or nearly half.

(source: Reuters)