United Stock Makes Debut
Posted on: Monday, 6 February 2006, 12:00 CST
By DAVE CARPENTER Associated Press
The shares' value on the Nasdaq market was double the forecast.
CHICAGO -- United Airlines' new stock fell 10 percent from its initial valuation Thursday but the value remained more than double what the carrier had forecast, marking a successful debut on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
On the company's first full day out of bankruptcy since December 2002, its new shares declined $4.11 to a close of $35.89 from the $40 price established in preliminary trading earlier this week. Volume was fairly heavy, with nearly 3.7 million shares traded.
"Today marks a new chapter for United, and it starts from a renewed position of strength," said CEO Glenn Tilton, who opened the Nasdaq in a live remote hookup from O'Hare International Airport.
Record-level oil prices and competitive threats from discount airlines cast a shadow over United's exit from bankruptcy after 38 months. But the strong interest in United among banks and now investors amounts to a financial vote of confidence.
"It kind of belies the contention that there is a shortage of domestic capital available for the airline industry," airline consultant Robert Mann said of the interest in United's stock and the earlier oversubscription to its exit financing.
The old, over-the-counter shares in parent UAL Corp. were canceled.
United's original estimate of what the shares would fetch was based on a study by the Rothschild investment bank last fall pegging the company's post-bankruptcy value at between $300 million and $3.5 billion. The midpoint of that range would have put the shares' value at about $15. Heightened interest in the stock drove the shares to $40 in five days of trading on a "when-issued" basis on Nasdaq's bulletin board before they went live Thursday in trading on the Nasdaq.
The largest shareholder in Elk Grove Village-based carrier is the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., by virtue of the bankruptcy agreement in which United dumped its defined-benefit plans on the federal agency and in exchange gave it 20 percent of the roughly 125 million shares issued.
The PBGC has signaled its intent to sell half of its approximately 25 million shares to raise cash to help pay for pension benefits, making it one likely source of Thursday's selling.
Other big winners from the stock debut are Tilton and 400 United executives, who were granted 8 percent of the stock under a controversial portion of the airline's reorganization plan.
United slashed its annual costs by about $7 billion during the bankruptcy makeover. It now has about 30 percent fewer employees, 20 percent fewer airplanes and 20 percent lower operating costs, excluding fuel, than it did when the restructuring began Dec. 9, 2002.
www.united.com
Source: Tulsa World
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