EasyJet Rejects £4.74 Billion Bid From Castlelake
The U.S. investment firm said the £6.25-a-share offer is fully funded and backed by aviation executives to address EU ownership rules.
- On Monday, Minneapolis-based Castlelake publicly disclosed its £4.74 billion takeover bid for EasyJet after the carrier rejected three previous proposals from the U.S. investment firm.
- EasyJet's board rejected the third proposal on Sunday, June 21, 2026, calling it an "opportunistic attempt to acquire EasyJet 'on the cheap'" and not in shareholders' best interests.
- To navigate European ownership rules requiring EU-national majority control, Castlelake partnered with Malaysia Airlines CEO Peter Bellew and other EU investors, arguing the structure aligns with other European carriers.
- Shares in the airline rose in early trading on Monday, while Castlelake faces a June 26 "put-up or shut-up" deadline set by the Takeover Panel to formalize its offer.
- Goodbody Stockbrokers analyst Dudley Shanley said "there will be increased pressure on the board this week," while Castlelake insists its latest bid offers "compelling value" at a 59 percent premium to pre-bid share prices.
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Easyjet management notes that the interest in taking over the company comes at a time when their share price has fallen.
easyJet has rejected a U.S. firm's $6.3 billion takeover bid — so the firm went straight to shareholders
The U.S. investment firm is appealing directly to easyJet shareholders after the airline's board unanimously rejected its latest offer of 625 pence a share
EasyJet's board rejected Castlelake's third acquisition proposal, worth £4.74 billion (US$6.27 billion), but the US investment manager asked the airline's shareholders to support their plan to close the capital of the low-cost British company after the conflict in the Middle East to press their shares. Exclusive material for subscribers. To have full access, access the link to the subject and register.
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