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EasyJet shares surge on $7.3 billion takeover, but investors stay wary

By Thomson Reuters Jul 6, 2026 | 2:59 AM

July 6 (Reuters) – Shares in easyJet rose 11.4% on Monday after the budget airline agreed in principle to a £5.5 billion ($7.34 billion) takeover from Castlelake over the weekend but were under the bid price as investors worried the ​deal might struggle to secure approval.

EasyJet said on Sunday it was ‌prepared to accept U.S. investment firm Castlelake’s sweetened bid of £6.90 apiece, potentially ending lengthy negotiations and reshaping Europe’s aviation industry.

The bid was a nearly 24% premium to easyJet’s close on Friday, and around the £7 price some investors were reportedly holding out for after four previous Castlelake proposals were rejected.

EasyJet, which ‌rose ​to as much as £6.22 on Monday, was up 9.7% ⁠at £6.12 as of 0748 GMT.

A ⁠shareholder who declined to be named noted that current levels indicated the market was pricing a more than 30% probability of the deal falling through.

Still, the stock has gained more than 50% since Castlelake’s interest became public in late May.

The ​potential take-private deal, which also includes a partial equity alternative, comes when airlines are grappling with sharply higher fuel prices and margin pressure linked to the Iran ⁠conflict.

JPMorgan analysts raised concerns about how aviation-focused lender Castlelake ⁠and easyJet would meet European Union ownership requirements and agree ​on a structure, with founder and controlling shareholder Stelios Haji-Ioannou’s views also unclear.

EasyJet said on ​Sunday that Castlelake had agreed to a “best endeavours” commitment to obtain regulatory ‌clearances.

Haji-Ioannou declined to comment on Monday.

Castlelake has previously said it would own 49% of the bidding vehicle with the remainder held by two EU nationals, former easyJet chief operating officer Peter Bellew, and senior industry executive Mark Breen.

EU regulations require airlines operating in ⁠the bloc to be majority-owned and controlled by EU nationals.

JPMorgan also noted that approval from shareholders was not guaranteed with prospects of a counter bid also open, or other ⁠carriers looking to buy parts ‌of easyJet.

“While a decent premium to the lacklustre trading of ⁠recent years, it still represents a deep discount to the ​share price ‌of the late 2010s, a sign of how in need ​easyJet is ⁠for someone to take the controls and plot a more successful flight path,” said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at trading platform IG.

Castlelake must formalise its offer by August 3 or walk away under British takeover rules.

($1 = £0.7496)

(Reporting by Prerna Bedi and Yamini Kalia in Bengaluru, and Joanna Plucinska in London; Writing by Pushkala Aripaka; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips, Susan ​Fenton and Kate Mayberry)