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Exclusive: Treasury wants warrants, repayment from major U.S. airlines on 30% of grant money - sources

Published 04/10/2020, 02:39 PM
Updated 04/11/2020, 07:50 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Washington

(This April 10 story has been refiled to fix typo in 'aid' in paragraph nineteen.)

By David Shepardson and Tracy Rucinski

WASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told major airlines on Friday he wants them to repay some of the $25 billion in cash grants the U.S. Congress approved last month to cover payroll costs as airlines weather an unprecedented crisis due to the coronavirus, three industry officials briefed on the matter told Reuters.

The Treasury said in a statement Mnuchin will not require passenger air carriers that will receive $100 million in payroll assistance or less to provide compensation and "funds will be available promptly upon approval of their applications."

Reuters first reported earlier on Friday that Treasury would not seek warrants from smaller regional carriers, which had urged the government not to demand compensation.

Mnuchin spoke with the chief executives of major airlines in separate calls on Friday and told them the department was offering 70% of the aid in grants that would not need to be repaid, and 30% in low-interest loans for which the airlines would be required to offer warrants, the sources said. The interest rates would rise over time if airlines had not repaid them, the sources said.

Three people briefed on the matter said the warrants, which would give the government the right to buy equity at a pre-set price and time, would be equal to 10% of the value of the loan.

That means that every $1 billion in government aid would include $700 million in grants, $300 million in low-interest loans and an option for the government to buy $30 million in shares. Two people said the warrants would be priced at current stock prices.

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Any of the terms could still be subject to change as talks continue.

Warrants do not generate any balance sheet debt and thus should not hamper the ability of airlines, which can also apply for a separate $25 billion government loan package, to finance in the future, experts said.

Treasury said it is working with 12 passenger air carriers expected to get more than $100 million "to secure appropriate financial instruments to compensate taxpayers."

The majority of the smaller requests sought less than $10 million and Treasury is not seeking compensation in order to maintain "needed air service," avoiding layoffs "and limiting share buyback and executive compensation."

On Sunday, Alaska'a largest regional carrier, RavnAir filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, laying off nearly its entire staff and grounding all of its 72 planes.

Treasury said it received more than 230 requests from passenger carriers.

Airlines were told they could apply for the amount they paid in salaries and benefits in the second and third quarters of 2019. American Airlines Group Inc (O:AAL), with the largest number of employees, had said it was seeking around $6 billion.

A United Airlines Holdings Inc (O:UAL) spokesman said the company was reviewing the details of Treasury's proposal. American Airlines also confirmed it was reviewing the proposal.

Airline boards and officials plan to review the proposals all weekend and it is not clear if they will accept the terms or propose a counteroffer.

Under the terms laid out in the statute, companies receiving funds cannot lay off employees before Sept. 30 or change collective bargaining agreements, two conditions for which labor unions had lobbied aggressively.

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The bill bars entities from receiving grants from stock buybacks, or paying dividends before September 2021 and sets limits on executive compensation.

Airline unions and Democrats in the U.S. Congress have pressed Treasury to grant the assistance quickly and without requiring unreasonable conditions on airlines that are struggling.

The choice of grants as a type of support is sensitive in the airline industry after a 2015 spat in which U.S. carriers accused Gulf carriers of receiving $50 billion of aid including grants to set up competing Middle East hubs, a charge they denied.

Under the $2.3 trillion CARES Act, passenger airlines are eligible for $25 billion in cash grants for payroll while cargo carriers can get $4 billion and airport contractors like caterers and airplane cleaners $3 billion, in addition to a separate loan package for which they can apply in the months ahead.

Treasury told the airlines that they plan to charge varying interest rates on the $25 billion in loans based on a risk assessment.

Reuters reported on Thursday that the six largest U.S. airlines -- American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines (N:DAL) Southwest Airlines Co (N:LUV), JetBlue Airways Corp (N:JBLU) and Alaska Airlines (N:ALK) -- are expected to get around 90% of the $25 billion package.

Airlines say they are suffering the worst crisis of their history as travel demand has dwindled to less than 5% of normal levels. Several major U.S. airlines filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from creditors after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks or the 2009 financial crisis.

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Latest comments

We are now getting a very strong definition of trickle down economics. Keep the wealthy happy because they are so brilliant. It's time to stop trickle down economics.
All small business owners who have been affected by coronavirus want to pay off the same amount of bail out money. Why do the government tries to help large companies only?
I think supporting airlines is essential. airline is kind of heart of industry. we have to save them.
Of course, it will go even worse because Trump thinks that better is to invest in stocks than anything else so he directed most of Your money in wrong direction. But US people are still blind. They do not understand Trumps mind and Trumps moves. But You will find out everything and unfortunately rest of world will also pay the price because without US economy we are all doomed
Benefits just for minority. Remember, everyone get one vote for election. Dow Jones up to 30,000 pts doesn't guarantee winning the election.
screw this i'm never working again, gonna just complain for govt gibs
While I'm not a socialist....I do find it funny that all the conservatives chanted "We don't have enough money" for universal healthcare.....but we got 10,000,000,000,000-20,000,000,000,000 to bailout corporations that make BILLIONS each year. Just wondering when the people who make up these political parties are going to stop parroting their talking points? "We don't have the money"......lol What they mean is, "We don't have the money for YOU and your family" And people vote them in....
We DONT have the $. THAT is the problem. Our national debt is so high that we can barely service the interest on the debt. So now when the House of Cards is about to fall the ONLY remedy is more DEBT. So the Fed and Treasury PRINT more $. This $ is being created out of thin air. Just typed in a computer and ****it exists. This is putting more $ in circulation. So in an IMMEDIATE Crisis....YES they can "get" the $. But for them to try to "PAY" for a program while also trying to lessen debt is near impossible. That is the reason for the tax cuts and deregulation....if you have enough money flow, you have more spending and more taxes paid back which helps reduce that debt in the end. It's like Walmart making more $ by putting the items on "SALE" so people buy more. Same concept but with taxes
lol american tax payers will be mad
Grant money?We were told it we be a loan and would add to their debt load. Irregardless, 100 % should be repaid at a interest rate of at least 6%. Boeing had been asking for this money well before the worst of the pandemic NYC.In addition, they produce planes, they are not an airline so the effects of the downturn hasnt hit their bottom line.We are steering our cliebts away from Boeing in the short term. Buy the major banks. JP Morgan, BAC,stay away from WFC in our opinion
Why would you invest in banks right now with everything about to hit the fan? I'm genuinely interested in that thought process....
See that shows how LITTLE you know about this. Banks will not do well here. Virtually NOTHING will do well here. If any airline is charged 6% they will NOT take the money. Interest rates are at ZERO for a reason. They WANT the airlines to take the $. If they dont MOST workers would fired. ALL of these programs to help businesses and families will come with about 0.5-1% interest over Prime which is 0%. If not NO ONE will be able to pay the interest and they default. Then its 2008 all over again on a MUCH BIGGER scale
bearish ...or "re-bearish" for stocks/corporate bonds.
I kinda think it's bullish
The time has come to put people back to work with some screening otherwise no government has enough money to support indefinite handouts.
we just need to have a good angle of flattening the curve, hopefully it doesnt return in the fall
i got family in qatar(ME) they said it is still spreading bad there, and its already pretty hot weather
every ten years we get to bail out "America's best and brightest" in automotive or air airtravel. It shows right now it pays off to higher a politician before a businessman because you want to be near washington when its bailout season. boeing convinced us it's an airline bailout and not a 737 max with dishonest bad management bailout?
look at the flighttraffic between europe snd the US. 50 times more in the US... 100% success for coronahttps://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.flightradar24.com/&ved=2ahUKEwipla2i997oAhUG2aQKHbSaAxsQFjAAegQIARAB&usg=AOvVaw3Kl8F_pSsWPVMsjJu5YYM7
that's like 1-2 months of payroll.
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