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Ryanair Co-Founder Plans Third Latin Airline Followed by an IPO

Ryanair Co-Founder Plans Third Latin Airline Followed by an IPO

(Bloomberg) -- Viva Air, the Latin American group of carriers owned by a founder of Ireland’s Ryanair Holdings Plc, has plans for a third airline in the region plus an initial public offering, to cash in on strong demand for discount air travel.

The company aims to sell shares in New York within two years, Viva’s biggest shareholder, Declan Ryan, said in an interview in Lima. The shares could also be listed on another exchange, such as Colombia’s, he said.

“We’re effectively the Ryanair of Latin America,” said Ryan, who was one of the founders of the budget Irish carrier. “The middle class in Latin America are moving every day. Colombia has a huge middle class so we’re seeing a lot more people hopping on our planes.”

Low cost carriers are disrupting the transport industry across Latin America by luring travelers away from long bus journeys while forcing older airlines to cut prices. Viva has become the third-biggest carrier in Colombia, where it started seven years ago, and the number two operator in Peru where Viva Air Peru started operations in 2017.

The company is considering Ecuador or Central America as the base for the third airline, Ryan said. As a precursor to the IPO, Ryan’s Irelandia Aviation said Thursday that it had sold a $50 million stake in Viva Air to Cartesian Capital Group, a New York-based private equity firm. The money will help fund the airline’s pending deliveries of 50 new Airbus SE 320 jets.

“Now that we have the bedrock of the equity in we can focus in on the IPO,” said Ryan. “Airlines needs to be publicly listed for access to capital.”

Ryan said that at least $100 million of Viva Air’s equity will be put up for the IPO and that he expects the offering will value the firm, which is based near Medellin, Colombia, at more than $500 million.

Chile’s low cost carriers Sky Airline and JetSmart have also expanded into neighboring countries this year. Cartesian previously invested in Argentina’s Flybondi alongside former Ryanair chief operating officer Michael Cawley.

Colombia and Peru will probably each get 20 of the new jets, with the rest going to the new base, Ryan said. In Central America the company favors Costa Rica and El Salvador, he said. Venezuela represents a “huge opportunity” when it overcomes its current crisis, he said.

Ryan sees Viva Air flying as many as 100 planes in the region within a decade.

--With assistance from Melissa Karsh.

To contact the reporter on this story: John Quigley in Lima at jquigley8@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Daniel Cancel at dcancel@bloomberg.net, Matthew Bristow, Susan Warren

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