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Spirit Airlines is preparing to shut down operations following the failure of a bailout plan, reports WSJ

The Wall Street Journal reported that Spirit Airlines, the bankrupt discount carrier, is about to stop operations after it failed to reach an agreement with bondholders, as well as the U.S. Government, on a bailout program.

Last month, President Donald Trump said that his administration wanted to purchase the embattled carrier for the "right price."

Later, sources said that the administration proposed $500 million of financing in exchange for warrants equal to 90% Spirit's equity.

The?report, citing sources familiar with the issue, said that there had been disagreements within the Trump administration about whether and how the bailout should be funded.

The report also stated that not all Spirit bondholders supported the deal.

The rescue hearing that was scheduled for April 30th did not happen after talks continued over terms of a possible $500 million U.S. government bailout.

Spirit's spokesperson declined to comment about ongoing discussions and said that "business as usual" is the company's position.

The White House didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

It would be the first industry casualty directly linked to the conflict in Iran.

Following the report, shares of rival Frontier Airlines rose 10% while JetBlue Airways gained 7.5%.

Spirit Airlines reached an agreement with its lenders earlier that would have allowed it to emerge from its second bankruptcies?by the end of spring or early summer.

These plans were derailed, however, after the war with Iran caused a sharp rise in?jet-fuel prices. This threw Spirit's cost estimates off and complicated?its bankruptcy.

According to disclosures made in March, the carrier based its turnaround plan on an average jet fuel cost of $2.24 a gallon in 2026. This would rise to $2.14 a gallon by?2027.

By the end of April, the price had risen to $4.51 per gallon. This was double what the projections assumed.

(source: Reuters)