EasyJet chair urges investors to reject founder’s call to remove directors

Stelios Haji-Ioannou seeks the removal of four directors to put pressure on management to cancel an order for over 100 Airbus jets

EasyJet chairman John Barton has written to shareholders urging them to vote against the airline’s activist founder in next week’s showdown over an Airbus contract. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images
EasyJet chairman John Barton has written to shareholders urging them to vote against the airline’s activist founder in next week’s showdown over an Airbus contract. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images

EasyJet chairman John Barton has written to shareholders urging them to vote against the airline's activist founder in next week's showdown over an Airbus contract.

The May 22nd vote will see Stelios Haji-Ioannou call for the removal of four company directors, including Barton and CEO Johan Lundgren, to put pressure on management to cancel an order for more than 100 jets. Several influential advisory firms have backed the British low-cost carrier, calling on investors to reject the resolutions.

EasyJet’s board and management have been “very actively planning” a range of possible scenarios to get through the aviation crisis caused by the Covid-19 outbreak, Barton wrote in a May 14th letter. They have already deferred delivery of 24 Airbus aircraft and have a further 24 leases up for renewal over the next 16 months.

The board “strongly disagrees with Stelios Haji-Ioannou’s view that the Airbus contract should be terminated,” Barton said, adding that it has “given considerable thought to how best to ensure we come through the crisis in the strongest position possible”.

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With the showdown set for next week, Haji-Ioannou, EasyJet’s largest shareholder, has ramped up his own years-long campaign to get the £4.5 billion pound order cancelled. He has accused some directors of being “scoundrels” and potentially corrupt, and offered a £5 million reward for information that helps secure the cancellation.

Airlines around the globe are cancelling or deferring jet orders as the pandemic leaves them with almost entirely grounded fleets. The dispute between management and the founder of one of the world's biggest low-cost carriers is an extreme example of the pressure carriers face as they seek to slash costs to survive the crisis. – Bloomberg