Alitalia agrees to €747m bid by Air France

AIR FRANCE-KLM group, the world's largest airline by sales, agreed to buy Alitalia SpA in a bid valued at €747 million ($1

AIR FRANCE-KLM group, the world's largest airline by sales, agreed to buy Alitalia SpA in a bid valued at €747 million ($1.2 billion) as part of the Italian government's plan to save the unprofitable carrier from bankruptcy.

Air France-KLM will swap one of its shares for every 160 of Alitalia's, valuing the Italian airline at €139 millions, or 10 cents a share, Air France said. That's 81 per cent less than the closing price on March 14th.

Air France offered €608 million for the carrier's convertible bonds. Alitalia's board accepted the bid after a 12-hour meeting in Rome at the weekend. In buying Alitalia, Air France-KLM wins access to one of Europe's biggest passenger markets, while inheriting an airline that has not earned an operating profit in almost a decade and loses more than €1 million a day.

The agreement may face opposition from unions concerned about layoffs and needs the government's backing, which will change next month.

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"In the short term the purchase may hurt profitability, but Alitalia will bring significant leverage with the opening of new hubs in Italy," said Alexandre Hezez of Paris-based Roche-Brune SAS, who helps manage €110 million.

Air France plans to sell €1 billion of new Alitalia shares to fund "the commercial relaunch" of the airline. The three-year business plan agreed to by Air France will scale back unprofitable routes, cut 1,600 workers, or almost 15 per cent of the Rome-based carrier's staff, and trim the size of its fleet in a bid to restore operating profit by 2009.

- (Bloomberg)