Expedia to raise $3.2bn funding ‘to survive’

Expedia to raise $3.2bn funding ‘to survive’

Expedia has named group vice-chairman Peter Kern as new chief executive and announced moves to raise $3.2 billion in funds.

Kern has been running Expedia with chairman Barry Diller since the removal of former chief executive Mark Okerstrom in December.

The $3.2 billion in new capital will come via a $1.2 billion investment by private equity firms Apollo Global Management and Silver Lake and $2 billion in new debt.

Apollo Global Management and Silver Lake will each receive a seat on the Expedia board.

The group also announced acting chief financial officer Eric Hart will take the role permanently. Hart took over from former chief financial officer Alan Pickerill, who left alongside Okerstrom.

Expedia said it would seek government aid in countries where it could and announced the furlough of employees and reduced hours of others, initially to the end of August

The group said executive salaries would be cut by 25% and board members be paid nothing for the remainder of the year.

In February, Expedia announced the loss of 3,000 jobs, 12% of its workforce, as Diller pronounced: “We are stopping doing dumb things.”

In a statement yesterday Diller said: “We have one mandate to conserve cash, survive and use this time to reconstruct a stronger enterprise.

“We are unable to make any predictions as to when travel will rebound but emphatically believe that it will.”

The $2 billion in debt will be raised through the issue of ‘senior unsecured notes’ (bonds) and is expected to close on May 5.

In a statement, Expedia said: “These efforts are part of a comprehensive strategy to enhance Expedia Group’s financial flexibility and strengthen its liquidity position.

Kern has been a member of Expedia’s board since 2005 and vice chairman since 2018. He was chief executive of Tribune Media until September 2019 and is a managing partner of private equity firm InterMedia Partners.

Hart has been with Expedia for 11 years and chief strategy officer since November 2019. He previously ran Expedia’s CarRentals.com brand for three years of oversaw corporate strategy.

Kern said: “Between the significant steps Expedia Group continues to take to simplify the business and this new funding, we are in a better position to rise to the current challenge and come out even stronger. We understand the financial challenges ahead.”

Norwegian Cruise Line to acquire Prestige Cruise Holdings

Updated: Norwegian Cruise Line to acquire Prestige Cruise Holdings

By Tom Stieghorst

Oceania RivieraNorwegian Cruise Line has announced it will acquire Prestige Cruise Holdings for $3.03 billion in cash, stock and assumed debt.

Norwegian said it will issue more than 20 million shares to help finance the purchase.

Prestige includes Oceania Cruises and Regent Seven Seas Cruises.

Prestige shareholders are entitled to an additional contingency payment of $50 million “upon achievement of certain 2015 performance metrics,” a statement said.

Apollo Global Management controls Norwegian through a 20% ownership stake and rights to nominate a majority of the board of directors. Two other partners in Norwegian, Genting Hong Kong and TPG Pacific, have assented to the deal.

Merging Norwegian and Prestige would create a company that can appeal to a broader market swath than Norwegian can on its own, Norwegian CEO Kevin Sheehan said.

“The combination of three distinct brands, each serving a different market segment, under one umbrella immediately creates an industry-leading cruise operator with an unmatched growth trajectory and a portfolio of products that allows us to appeal to guests at every stage of their life cycle,” he said.

After the merger, Frank Del Rio will remain chairman of Prestige Holdings, the statement said. The companies expect the deal to close in the fourth quarter.

In a teleconference, Norwegian CEO Kevin Sheehan said he sees opportunity to use the business model from Oceania and Regent to do a better job of marketing Norwegian’s Pride of America ship in Hawaii. Pride of America is a one-off product with an unusual itinerary, which lends itself to some of the Prestige approach, he suggested.

Sheehan emphasized he has a long list of potential synergies beyond an initial $25 million but that implementing them cannot damage the guest experience.  He said the synergies will remain “behind the curtain” and invisible to guests.

The synergies Sheehan identified in the call are in areas such as purchasing, crew recruitment, port relations, fuel and insurance sourcing, maintenance and dry dock contracts and marketing sponsorships and partnerships.

Sheehan said there may also be consolidation of the two shoreside organizations, which are located within five miles of each other in western Miami-Dade County.

Prestige chairman Frank Del Rio, who turns 60 in two weeks, said he was committed to remain with the company through the end of 2015. “After that, we’ll see what happens,” he said.

Del Rio said the Prestige brands are best at executing a good cruise but haven’t been as sharp on cost savings because of the company’s small size.

Sheehan suggested that negotiations with Del Rio over the deal were at times acrimonious. “We had our moments in the negotiation process, but at the end of the day we’ve shaken hands and are best buddies again,” he said.

Sheehan suggested that the $50 million contingency payment was a way of building into the deal the Prestige view of its future performance, while not paying for it upfront in case it proves less than forecast.

Norwegian in talks to buy Oceania and Regent parent

Norwegian in talks to buy Oceania and Regent parentNorwegian Cruise Line was last night reported to be in “advanced talks” to take over the parent company of luxury lines Oceania and Regent Seven Seas Cruises for around $3 billion.

Reuters cited “people familiar with the matter” and said a deal could be announced as early as this week.

A deal would give Norwegian, a company with a market value of $6.8 billion, access to Prestige Cruise Holdings’ luxury ships and affluent clientele as it competes with larger rivals Carnival Corporation and Royal Caribbean Cruises.

But sources cautioned that the talks could still fall apart. The owner of Prestige Cruises, private equity firm Apollo Global Management, also owns a 20% stake in Norwegian.

Miami-based Norwegian Cruise operates 13 cruise ships in North America, the Mediterranean, the Baltic, Central America and the Caribbean. It had revenues of $2.57 billion in 2013, up 13% from 2012.

Oceania and Regent together have eight cruise ships operating worldwide. Prestige posted revenues of $1.2 billion in 2013, up 6% from the year earlier.

Prestige registered with US regulators for an initial public offering in January. Apollo has been the company’s majority shareholder following an $850 million deal in 2007.

Apollo made a $1 billion investment in Norwegian in 2008 and the company went public in January 2013.

Carnival, Royal Caribbean Cruises and Norwegian together account for 82% of the North American cruise passenger berth capacity, according to Prestige Cruises’ initial public offering registration document.

Norwegian and Prestige representatives did not respond to requests for comment, while an Apollo spokesman declined to comment, according to Reuters.