Avolon to borrow $8.5bn to buy CIT’s leasing arm

Purchase will turn Irish-headquartered firm into world’s third-biggest air leasing group

Avolon’s chief executive Dómhnall Slattery: Avolon says  it will buy C2 Aviation Capital. Photograph: Eric Luke
Avolon’s chief executive Dómhnall Slattery: Avolon says it will buy C2 Aviation Capital. Photograph: Eric Luke

Aircraft financier Avolon is borrowing a total of $8.5 billion (€7.9 billion) to pay for the purchase of rival CIT’s leasing arm that it announced in October.

Avolon is buying US group CIT’s aircraft financing business for $10 billion in a move that will transform the Irish-headquartered company into the world’s third-biggest air leasing group with a fleet of 910 planes worth $43 billion.

It subsidiary, Park Aerospace Holdings, is raising $3 billion in two bond issues, one for $1.75 billion at 5.25 per cent interest that falls due in 2022 and another $1.25 billion at 5.5 per cent interest that must be repaid in 2024.

At the same time, Avolon is borrowing $5.5 billion from a number of banks that it will combine with the bonds and $3 billion in equity from its parent, Chinese group Bohai Capital Holding.

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In a statement on Friday, Avolon said that it would use the cash to buy the CIT division, known as C2 Aviation Capital, and to pay related fees and expenses. It added that subsidiaries of the business it is buying will guarantee the bonds that it is issuing.

Possible suitor

The Irish group was tipped as a possible suitor for C2 Aviation more than a year ago when it emerged that CIT was putting the division up for sale. Founder Dómhnall Slattery signalled at the time that Avolon wanted to increase its balance sheet beyond $40 billion and would have to buy other players to do this.

Announcing the deal in October, Mr Slattery pointed out that the business had gone from a standing start to a leading global player in six years. He established Avolon in 2010 with the backing of a number of private equity investors.

Avolon raised $1.6 billion when it launched on the New York Stock Exchange in December 2014. Chinese player Avic approached it with a $30 a share offer just eight months later, in August. However, Bohai, part of China’s HNA Group, subsequently trumped this with a $31 a share bid.

Avolon’s bonds will be tradable and it intends registering them so that they can be sold to institutional buyers that qualify under US securities law. The CIT purchase is subject to the approval of Bohai’s shareholders.

HNA is a $25 billion group, whose interests span aviation, travel and logistics. It also owns Hainan Airlines.

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O’Halloran covers energy, construction, insolvency, and gaming and betting, among other areas