A federal judge on Tuesday blocked JetBlue Airways’ proposed $3.8 billion acquisition of budget carrier Spirit Airlines, agreeing with the Justice Department that the deal would hurt the availability of low-cost air travel tickets.
U.S. District Judge William Young wrote that the proposed merger between JetBlue and Spirit “does violence to the core principle of antitrust law: to protect the United States’ markets – and its market participants – from anticompetitive harm.”
Young also wrote, “The consumers that rely on Spirit’s unique, low-price model would likely be harmed.”
Spirit’s stock plunged on the news, falling as much as 55% during trading Tuesday afternoon before closing down 47%. Dow Jones Market Data group noted that Spirit’s stock neared all-time lows after the ruling and experienced its largest percentage decrease on record. JetBlue’s stock closed 4.9% higher on the news.
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JetBlue and Spirit can appeal the judge’s ruling if they still wish to pursue the merger.
The ruling comes as a rare win for the Biden administration’s efforts to block mergers and acquisitions that it views as harming competition.
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The DOJ was joined by Democratic attorneys general from six states and the District of Columbia in arguing that a JetBlue-Spirit merger would reduce the number of flights available and result in higher prices for millions of traveling Americans.
They argued that letting JetBlue absorb its ultra-low-cost rival would “extinguish a vital source of low cost competitive disruption along more than 375 routes,” causing nearly $1 billion of net harm annually to consumers.
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Spirit was the first domestic U.S. airline to let passengers choose what features of their flights they pay for, such as checked bags and food and drink service – a model that caused competing airlines to cut prices, the DOJ said.
JetBlue’s lawyers argued the case was a “misguided” challenge to a merger between the sixth- and seventh-largest airlines in the U.S. that control less than 8% of the domestic market combined.
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For comparison, the four largest U.S. carriers – United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines – control 80% of the market following a series of previous airline mergers that received approval from the federal government.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
Reuters contributed to this report.