Virgin Australia bondholders urged to sign up for class action

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA: MARCH 8: commercial airliners from Virgin Airlines lined up on the tarmac on 8-3-2013 at Brisbane International Airport.

Virgin Australia bondholders who were displeased by the airline’s sale to private equity firm Bain Capital, have been encouraged to sign up to the class action against the carrier’s former and current directors and senior executives.

The lawsuit will be funded by London firm Balance Legal Capital and led by Corrs Chamber Westgarth. The suit is expected to be filed in Federal Court.

The suit will allege Virgin Australia did not disclose its true financial position in a 2019 prospectus for a capital raising to fund its $700 million acquisition of the Velocity frequent flyer program.

Investors were invited to purchase unsecured notes at $100 each, with a minimum spend of $5000.

The prospectus illustrated that Virgin Australia had incurred losses over the past three financial years and outlined how the company planned to return to profitability.

The plan included cost-cutting to slash $75 million a year, an organisational restructuring, and a supplier to save the airline $50 million annually.

Virgin Australia filed for administration with debts of more than $7 billion, less than six months after the capital raising and the COVID pandemic erupting.

Bain Capital then purchased the airline for $3.5 billion in a deal that saw 6500 bondholders receive between 9 and 13 cents on the dollar, however, this did not sit well with bondholders, some of whom unsuccessfully tried to purchase Virgin Australia during its administration.

Those who purchased unsecured notes in Virgin Australia will be eligible to take part in the class action, according to Balance Legal Capital.

Balance Legal Capital describes its work as “promoting access to justice by supporting litigants who do not have the means or the capability to fund worthy litigation.”

After the sale to Bain Capital was confirmed in September 2020, former Virgin Australia boss Paul Scurrah was let go in favour of previous Qantas executive Jayne Hrdlicka.

Under Hrdlicka’s new management the airline relaunched as a “mid-market carrier” that targeted leisure passengers.

Some of the cuts the airline made include scrapping free in-flight snacks in economy, and an overhaul of business class meals to cheaper meals.

Latest News

  • Cruise
  • News

Search underway for missing cruiser of Sydney Heads

Carnival Cruise Lines have confirmed a search is underway for a passenger who went overboard P&O Cruises Pacific Adventure about 20 kilometres off Sydney Heads this morning. Pacific Adventure was due to dock at Sydney Harbour at 6am this morning but is now searching the waters after a man went overboard around 4:15am. One passenger told 2GB […]

  • Partner Content

Wendy Wu Tours ‘Wonderlust Sale’ offers the wonders of the world for less

Wendy Wu Tours opens the month of May with some very special deals across its most sought-after destinations. From Japan, China and South Korea to Southeast Asia, Central Asia and across India and Latin America, the ‘Wonderlust Sale’ sees all destinations on sale.  The ‘Wonderlust Sale’ is an offer too good to resist with incredible […]

Partner Content

by Travel Weekly

Travel Weekly
  • Technology

Booking.com launches AI Trip Planner in Australia and New Zealand

Booking.com has announced its AI Trip Planner (Beta) is now available for travellers in Australia and New Zealand, the first markets to launch in Asia Pacific. Until now, AI Trip Planner was only available for US and UK travellers after it was launched in the Booking.com app in June last year. Built using Booking.com’s existing […]

  • Products

Embrace the journey: Traversing the world with the Shokz OpenRun

If you’ve been on the wrong side of a final call in the airport, or missed the stop on rail journey, it might be time to invest in a pair of Shokz OpenRun headphones. Originally marketed as headphones for fitness fanatics, runners or cyclists with a keen to steer clear of a prang with a car, […]

  • Tour Operators
  • Tourism

TTC: Deals are driving up demand for September trips

The latest market research from TTC Tour Brands shows interest in international leisure travel remains high for 2024, with 77 per cent of Australians over 18 still planning trips this year. Notably, 28 per cent of those travellers are eyeing September for their journeys. Europe continues to be the most popular destination, with 68 per […]

  • Aviation

Qantas ‘working urgently’ to fix app data leak

Qantas is looking into customer reports that passengers have this morning been able to access other passengers’ personal information on the airlines app. X user Lachlan posted that he was able log into different accounts every time he opened the app. My @Qantas app logs me in to a different person each time I open […]