UK holiday group Thomas Cook agrees number of key terms in rescue deal

Shareholder Fosun set to contribute €498m for significant stake in business

Thomas Cook has struggled with intense competition in popular destinations, high debt levels and an unusually hot summer last year which reduced its last-minute bookings. Photograph: Chris Radburn/PA Wire
Thomas Cook has struggled with intense competition in popular destinations, high debt levels and an unusually hot summer last year which reduced its last-minute bookings. Photograph: Chris Radburn/PA Wire

British travel operator Thomas Cook Group said on Wednesday it had agreed a substantial number of the terms of a rescue package that will see Hong Kong's Fosun Tourism take over its tour operations and creditor banks and bondholders acquire its airline.

The world’s oldest travel company, and pioneer of the package tour, has struggled with intense competition in popular destinations, high debt levels and an unusually hot summer in 2018 which reduced its last-minute bookings. The debt burden meant the company had to sell 3 million holidays a year just to pay the interest, it said last month.

Thomas Cook also said in July that it was working to secure new investment from shareholder Fosun Tourism which would see the Hong Kong group take control of the business, along with its lenders whose debt would be converted into equity.

The terms announced on Wednesday will see Fosun – whose Chinese parent owns all-inclusive holiday firm Club Med – contribute £450 million (€495 million) of new money in return for at least 75 per cent of the tour operator business and 25 per cent of the group’s airline.

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Existing debt

Thomas Cook’s lending banks and bondholders will stump up a further £450 million and convert their existing debt to equity, giving them in total about 75 per cent of the airline and up to 25 per cent in the tour operator business, the group said. The recapitalisation plan, which is subject to a legally binding agreement between the parties, will result in a significant dilution in existing

Thomas Cook shareholders’ interests, the company said, but it had decided it was the best way to secure the future of the group for all its stakeholders. Shares in Thomas Cook, which were trading at 150 pence in May 2018, fell 15 per cent to just under 6 pence in early deals on Wednesday.

AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said shareholders in the troubled travel company may have to accept that their investment could be worthless.

“Investors are simply trying to cash out and crystallise any value left in their investment before the refinancing, for fear there could be nothing left if they wait,” he said.

Airline business

Earlier this year, Thomas Cook said it was exploring a sale of its airline business, which consists of German carrier Condor and UK, Spanish and Scandinavian operations, but a further profit warning in May left management seeking a more radical solution to save the business.

Fosun Tourism’s parent Fosun International was co-founded by billionaire Guo Guangchang and is one of China’s biggest conglomerates. As well as Club Med, Fosun International also owns English Premier League soccer team Wolverhampton Wanderers FC. – Reuters