A lawyer for JetBlue Airways says that the biggest US airlines are using their size to cement their dominance in a post-pandemic world, making it critical that a federal judge allow JetBlue to buy Spirit Airlines. The lawyer, Ryan Shores, said JetBlue needs Spirit to be a “viable challenger” to the four airlines that control most of the domestic air-travel market.
“That mandate is even more urgent today,” Shores said during closing arguments in a federal court trial over the US Justice Department’s lawsuit to block JetBlue’s US$3.8 billion purchase of Spirit, the nation’s biggest low-fare carrier.
A Justice Department lawyer argued that the deal would push fares higher by 30% and leave fewer options for travellers on a budget.
Edward Duffy said if JetBlue absorbs Spirit, it would cut the ultra-low-cost-carrier share of the market by half – or 6 million fewer budget flights per year.
Duffy said JetBlue was contradicting itself by arguing that because of its smaller size it needs Spirit to grow fast enough to challenge the bigger airlines, while also claiming that even smaller low-cost rivals such as Frontier Airlines would have no trouble growing fast enough to replace Spirit’s presence in the market.
“And most tellingly, they have invited the court to look past the harms caused to passengers who can’t pay for JetBlue’s richer experience,” Duffy said.
There is no jury in the trial, which has stretched over several weeks and included testimony by the CEOs of both airlines. No ruling was expected Tuesday from U.S. District Judge William Young.
During the closing arguments, the judge peppered JetBlue and Spirit lawyers with questions, including how long it would take for consumers to see benefits that JetBlue promises the merger will deliver, such as more competition with the bigger airlines.
The JetBlue lawyer suggested that it could be two or three years, “after the market has arrived at its post-merger competitive equilibrium.”
Before the trial started, JetBlue sought to win regulatory approval by agreeing to sell off gates and takeoff and landing slots at airports in Boston, the New York City area and Fort Lauderdale, Fla. On Tuesday, the judge asked if there were other divestitures that might make the merger acceptable.
Duffy, the Justice Department lawyer, tried to close the door on more divestitures. He said the merger is so anti-competitive that nothing short of a full injunction against the deal would suffice.
The government sued to block the deal in March.
The trial represents another test for the Biden administration’s fight against consolidation in the airline industry. Earlier this year, the Justice Department won an antitrust lawsuit and broke up a partnership in New York and Boston between JetBlue and American Airlines.
The outcome of the current trial could reshape the field of so-called ultra-low-cost airlines, which charge low fares but tack on more fees than the traditional carriers that dominate the US air-travel market. If Spirit is acquired by JetBlue, Frontier would become the biggest discount carrier in the US, followed by Allegiant Air and new entrants Breeze and Avelo.
JetBlue is the nation’s sixth-largest airline by revenue, but it would leapfrog Alaska Airlines into fifth place by buying Spirit.
This week, Alaska announced an acquisition of its own – it struck an agreement to buy Hawaiian Airlines for $1 billion. The Justice Department has not indicated whether it will challenge that deal.
Previous administrations allowed a series of mergers that consolidated the industry to the point where four carriers – American, Delta, United and Southwest – control about 80% of the domestic air-travel market. The Justice Department filed lawsuits to extract concessions in some of those earlier mergers, but JetBlue-Spirit is the first one that has gone to trial.
Spirit agreed to merge with Frontier Airlines, which shares its ultra-low-cost business model, but JetBlue beat Frontier in a bidding war.
If it wins in court, JetBlue will nearly double its fleet, repaint Spirit’s yellow planes and remove some of the seats to make them less cramped, like JetBlue planes.