London's Gatwick Airport Sold For $3.7 Billion To French Firm

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Gatwick has been under pressure due to intensifying competition from London's other airports.Vinci SA agreed to acquire control of Gatwick
Airport for 2.9 billion pounds ($3.7 billion) as the French construction company jumped on the chance to add a major London hub to its
aviation portfolio.The purchase of the 50.01 per cent stake in the world's second-busiest single runway airport from a group of investors
including sovereign wealth funds from Abu Dhabi and Australia will be financed with pound-denominated debt, Vinci said Thursday
Existing shareholder Global Infrastructure Partners will manage the remaining holding.With 45.7 million passengers in 2018, Gatwick will
become the largest airport in Vinci's global network spanning Brazil to Sweden
Gatwick has been under pressure due to intensifying competition from London's other airports and lost out to Heathrow, Europe's busiest hub,
in a contest to win government backing for the construction of a new runway
Its operations descended into chaos just before Christmas after drones were spotted around the runway led to a prolonged shutdown.The
120-year-old engineering company is shrugging off risks surrounding Britain's looming exit from the European Union, as rival airports warn
demand for air-travel could be dented
Manchester Airports Group, operator of rival London hub Stansted, sees the current Brexit plan trimming passenger numbers over the next five
years but doesn't expect it to halt growth entirely
Like Stansted, Gatwick is targeting more long-haul flights."Airports are attractive investments, especially in a world of high volatility,
because airport returns can be quite predictable and manageable even if passenger numbers are volatile," Bernstein analyst Daniel Roeska
said by phone
"In any Brexit scenario, people will still go on holiday
In the long term it won't be impacted that much on the leisure side."Vinci shares declined 0.3 percent to 70.28 euros as of 4:22 p.m
in the French capital
They have fallen 17 percent this year for a market value of 42 billion euros ($48 billion).Gatwick has outlined 1.11 billion pounds in
investment plans to expand its two terminals in the next five years, and plans to use its existing standby runway by the mid-2020s to help
handle more flights
London's second-busiest airport is the biggest base for discount carrier EasyJet Plc, and the focus for long-haul leisure flights at British
Airways.The sale values Gatwick at 19 times 2019 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization and can be considered low,
Vinci airports head Nicolas Notebaert said on a call with journalists
Brexit risks were factored into the bid and banking partners have already expressed an interest in lending to Vinci
While the valuation is broadly in line with recent deals in the industry, it's on the pricey end given the uncertainty around Brexit,
according to Vittorio Carelli, an analyst at Grupo Santander."I would have preferred to see a multiple closer to 17 or 18 times," said
Carelli
Gatwick's plan to put its standby runway in full operation may increase the number of passengers the airport can service, he said.Global
Infrastructure Partners, which manages more than $40 billion in assets from ports and airports to a vast wind farm in the North Sea, bought
Gatwick with a consortium of investors in 2009 for about 1.5 billion pounds
The airport reported earnings of 411.2 million pounds in the fiscal year through March, on revenue of 764.2 million pounds.Vinci manages
about 35 airports, in countries including Chile and Cambodia
The company also operates toll roads and a construction business
It will retain Gatwick's management team and sees the main opportunity for improving profitability as increasing duty-free spending rather
than operational changes.Vinci's next major European airport opportunity could be on its doorstep if the French government privatizes
Aeroports de Paris
Executives at Vinci dismissed questions from analysts on a call Thursday about how it would finance such an investment following its splurge
on Gatwick, saying the operator of Paris Charles de Gaulle currently isn't for sale.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited
by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)