Originally Posted by
FlyFlorida2025
Months ago, people argued that Southwest would never buy Airbus aircraft. Now, based on public statements from Southwest’s CEO, that’s no longer true. Southwest has been reshaping the airline to align itself more closely with what Spirit is trying to do. Spirit, meanwhile, is in the process of uplifting its enterprise value so it can be sold at a premium. The DIP lenders are the equity holders from the first bankruptcy who traded debt for equity. They will recover their DIP financing and are positioning themselves for a premium return on their stock, which has been locked up and unsellable since the first bankruptcy.
I believe they walked away from Frontier’s offer in February because they thought they could get more for the airline later by filing bankruptcy a second time. This process looks choreographed: Spirit’s stakeholders are now positioning themselves to maximize their return on investment.
I have read every single filing, including all the transcripts. You will see the same clause that I found, and maybe you will change your mind. Spirit is divesting assets to gain regulatory approvals, but they are not liquidating. Instead, they are reducing debt by shedding mostly non‑flying and unprofitable aircraft, which directly improves enterprise value. Southwest has future plans that demand more planes, and Spirit solves that problem immediately.
A merger with Southwest in February would not have been possible, but one now is more likely than ever before because of everything that has been done over the last 10 months: debt reduction, fleet restructuring, labor concessions, and asset divestitures. Am I right? Only time will tell. But one thing is clear — Spirit isn’t liquidating.
Looking at buying airbus planes does not equal buying Spirit. Southwest can get a lot of planes quickly from lessors without getting a bunch of planes they will have to carry the costs on while they try and reconfigure them for their fleet. Also they avoid the debt. Also the CEO said recently they would prefer to keep a single fleet type but are "open" to exploring other fleets. What I've heard is they are looking at 787s, which they can't get quickly so then they took a look at used 787s.
Nowhere in his comments does it give any indication they are "buying Spirit".
Also there is no "we are preparing for a merger" or anything like you mention in any filing etc.
I get why you desperately want another stable airline to buy all of Spirit, but I don't see anyone doing that and carrying that much debt and ongoing losses not to mention the added integration costs. Its just far too toxic of a deal.