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SURPRISE: SAS taken over by Air France KLM consortium, leaving Star, joining SkyTeam

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Today was the day that Scandinavian airline SAS was to announce its new shareholders as it completed its financial restucturing.

The belief in the market was that Scandinavian banks and institutions would come together to produce an ‘all local’ deal which kept full control of the airline in the region.

The market was wrong.

SAS acquired by AIr France KLM, to join SkyTeam

Surprisingly, Air France KLM was announced today as the lead partner in the winning bidder for the airline.

Air France KLM will form a consortium with financial firms Castlelake and Lind Invest, together with a contribution from the Danish government, to acquire the airline.

Initially, Castlelake will be the largest shareholder with 32% followed by the Danish government with 26%. Air France KLM will cap its shareholding at 19.9% for now. Some equity will be given to existing creditors of the airline.

Importantly, Air France KLM has agreed that – after no less than two years – it can take a controlling stake in the airline by acquiring shares from other investors.

It has been confirmed that SAS will leave Star Alliance – of which it was a founding member – and join Air France KLM (and Virgin Atlantic) in SkyTeam. The airline will restructure itself to provide greater feed into the existing Air France and KLM operations in Paris and Amsterdam.

SAS taken over by Air France KLM consortium

The new investment totals $1.175 billion. This is made up of a mix of equity ($475 million) and convertible debt ($700m) together with $500m from Castlelake to refinance the ‘debtor in possession’ term loan.

The Air France KLM share of the investment is $145m, of which $110m is equity and the remaining $35m in the form of secured convertible bonds. 

The deal is expected to leave nothing to the existing shareholders of SAS who have been wiped out by the Chapter 11 restructuring. The deal still needs various legal approvals before it can complete and SAS AB is delisted – completion is currently planned for the second quarter of 2024.

SAS Chief Executive Anko van der Werff said:

“Through the completion of this process and the opportunities presented by being part of SkyTeam, we will be able to further enhance SAS’s offerings for the benefit of our colleagues, customers and communities”

Benjamin Smith, CEO of Air France KLM said:

“This is an important day for SAS and for Air France KLM. We are pleased to be part of the winning bidding consortium selected by the board of SAS. Air France KLM looks forward to establishing strong commercial ties with SAS. With its well-established position in Scandinavia and strong brand, SAS offers tremendous potential to Air France KLM. This cooperation will allow Air France KLM to enhance its position in the Nordics and improve connectivity for Scandinavian and European travelers. We look forward to being a part of this new chapter in SAS’ history and thank the board of SAS for their trust.”

You can read more on the Air France KLM website here and in the official SAS release here.

With Lufthansa acquiring Italy’s ITA in a similar staged process and IAG keen to pounce on TAP, we may see three flag carriers absorbed into bigger groups by the end of 2024.


How to earn Flying Blue miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Flying Blue miles from UK credit cards (April 2025)

Air France and KLM do not have a UK Flying Blue credit card.  However, you can earn Flying Blue miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

These cards earn Membership Rewards points:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:1 into Flying Blue miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 1 Flying Blue mile.

The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it, not just with Air France and KLM but with any airline.

Comments (88)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Skywalker says:

    This news just this minute popped up in my inbox, and there was already an article on the HfP site.

    Outstanding! 😀

  • Track says:

    It is interesting: there are airlines, and there are airlines which equity is guaranteed to be wiped to zero.

    • ADS says:

      i didn’t realise that SAS were quite this bad !

      and the announcement doesn’t give much of an indication as to how this is going to change

  • David says:

    Would love to be a fly on the wall at Lufthansa HQ today !

  • Craig says:

    Have these airlines paid back the loans they received from government during COVId yet??

  • al_wiltshire says:

    My colleague mentioned that he was chasing SAS ‘Lifetime Gold’ (10 years continuous?). He said that there we big risks associated with it. He wasn’t wrong.

    • memesweeper says:

      More than likely that will remain achievable- at least for now. Unfortunately if it was Star, not ST, lifetime that was really wanted… this is less good news.

  • BBbetter says:

    Typical Europe. More consolidation. Less competition. Lower service standards. Less creativity.

    • G says:

      Not unlike the Middle East (Emirates, Qatar, Etihad), US (American, Delta, United) Canada (Air Canada) or China (China Eastern, China Southern, Air China) right??

    • pigeon says:

      You haven’t seen the Australian market… there the competition is tiny, regulation is very weak and Qantas / Jetstar have been pushing lower and lower standards.

      • MPC says:

        There’s 20 million people across a country the size of Europe – What do you expect?

  • Coo says:

    Big surprise here.

    Just made Diamond which means I can gift a Star Alliance Gold convertible to SkyTeam 😂

  • Peter says:

    Dear EU/US comp authorities, please keep at least Asiana in Star Alliance 😉

    • Kurt says:

      Dear Korean comp authorities – please block their merger with KAL

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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