KEY POINTS
  • Spirit Airlines CEO Ted Christie on Thursday laid bare the reasons his company rejected JetBlue Airways' $3.6 billion offer to buy the low-cost carrier.
  • "I have wondered whether blocking our deal with Frontier is in fact their goal," Christie said.
  • In February, Spirit and Frontier announced plans to merge in what would create a massive discount airline, the fifth-largest carrier in the U.S.

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A JetBlue airliner lands past a Spirit Airlines jet on taxi way at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport on Monday, April 25, 2022.

Spirit Airlines CEO Ted Christie on Thursday laid bare the reasons his company rejected JetBlue Airways' $3.6 billion offer to buy the ultra-low-cost carrier, and went so far as to suggest that the bid may have been intended to stop Spirit's planned merger with Frontier Airlines.

"JetBlue shareholders aren't supportive of this deal, either, based on the company's stock performance. However, despite clear concern from JetBlue shareholders, JetBlue has continued to pursue disruption to the Spirit-Frontier combination," Christie said during Spirit's first-quarter earnings call.

In this article